| Newswise
— Duct tape that never loses its stick. Bandages that
come off without sticky residue or an "ouch."
Gecko feet may hold the key
to the development of synthetic self-cleaning adhesives,
according to a biologist from Lewis & Clark College.
The research is published in the online early edition
of the Proceedings from the National Academy of Sciences
of the United States, or PNAS (http://www.pnas.org)
during the week of Jan. 3, 2005 (Article #08304: "Evidence
for self-cleaning in gecko setae").
"How geckos manage to
keep their feet clean while walking about with sticky
feet has remained a puzzle until now," said Kellar
Autumn, associate professor of biology at Lewis &
Clark College. "Geckos don't groom their feet,
and the adhesive on their toes is much too sticky
for dirt to be shaken off. Conventional adhesives
like tape just get dirtier and dirtier, but we discovered
that gecko feet actually become cleaner with repeated
use."
Autumn's new research, published
in PNAS, found that the microscopic adhesive hairs--or
setae--that create the gecko's adhesive qualities
are also the first known self-cleaning adhesive. According
to Autumn, gecko setae isolated from the gecko become
cleaner by themselves.
"Our mathematical models
suggest that self-cleaning in gecko setae is a result
of geometry not chemistry," said Autumn. "This
means that synthetic self-cleaning adhesives could
be fabricated from a wide variety of materials. The
possibilities for future applications of a dry, self-cleaning
adhesive are enormous. We envision uses for our discovery
ranging from nanosurgery to aerospace applications.
Who knows--maybe a gecko-inspired robot with sticky,
self-cleaning feet will walk on the dusty surface
of Mars someday."
An interdisciplinary team of
researchers, led by Autumn, earlier confirmed speculation
that the gecko's amazing climbing ability depends
on weak molecular attractive forces called van der
Waals forces, named after a Dutch physicist of the
late 1800s. Van der Waals forces are weak electrodynamic
forces that operate over very small distances but
bond to nearly any material. Autumn's research team
rejected a 30-year-old model based on the adhesion
chemistry of water molecules. Instead, the research
team demonstrated that a gecko's ability to stick
to surfaces depends on geometry--not chemistry--to
synthesize the world's first gecko-based adhesive
microstructure.
The setae (microscopic hairs)
on the bottom of gecko's feet are only as long as
two diameters of a human hair. That's 100-millionths
of a meter long. Each seta ends with 1,000 even tinier
pads at the tip. These tips, called spatulae, are
only 200-billionths of a meter wide--below the wavelength
of visible light. In 2002, Ronald Fearing, a researcher
at the University of California at Berkeley, was able
to produce two artificial hair tips, while Autumn
and colleagues concluded that "both artificial
setal tips stuck as predicted and provide a path to
manufacturing the first dry, adhesive microstructures."
Fearing's group later made the first array of synthetic
gecko hairs with long stalks (6 micron stalk) and
relatively large diameters (6 micron diameter).
The team's research is supported
by the National Science Foundation and the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). More information
about Autumn's research is available online at http://www.lclark.edu/faculty/autumn/pnas05.html.
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