Terpene

Dry glue is a method of adhesion based around the naturally occurring adaptations of the feet of geckos, which allow them to climb sheer surfaces, and even glass walls.

Background

Gecko climbing glass using its natural seta

A gecko can hang on a glass surface using only one toe. This ability of geckos has been attributed to Van der Waals force,[1][2] although a more recent study suggests that water molecules of roughly monolayer thickness (present on virtually all natural surfaces) also play a role.[3]

Developments

Efforts continue to create a synthetic "gecko tape" that exploits the gecko's abilities. So far, research has produced some promising results — early research yielded an adhesive tape[4] product, which only obtains a fraction of the forces measured from the natural material, and new research[5] is being developed with the goal of featuring 200 times the adhesive forces of the natural material.

In 2006, researchers at Stanford University and Carnegie Mellon University developed a gecko-like robot which uses synthetic setae to mount walls.[6]

On October 9, 2008, the discovery of a new type of dry glue designed to mimic gecko feet was announced. The glue is 10 times stickier than the gravity-defying lizards, and three times stickier than other gecko-inspired glues. Liming Dai of the University of Dayton said "It's the stickiest dry glue yet".[7]

Military use

DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) is also currently working on this technology to enable a soldier to scale a wall at .5 m/s. This project is named Z-Man. Experiments are currently underway to develop nano-adhesives using the Van der Waals effect. Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the the University of Akron, in the US, have created a material made of columns of carbon nanotubes rooted in pieces of flexible polymer. The nanotubes were grown on a silicon base and then transferred to the polymer to provide a flexible base, similar to a gecko's foot. When dried, the polymer holds the silicon base, which in turn, holds the nanotubes.

Researchers announced in a paper published in the June 18–22, 2007 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that using this technique they have created a synthetic “gecko tape” with four times the sticking power of a natural gecko foot.[8] Particularly effective has been a checkerboard carpet of this material, which can be peeled and re-adhered repeatedly without weakening.[9]

References

  1. ^ http://www.clemson.edu/newsroom/articles/2009/august/geckos.php5
  2. ^ Kellar Autumn; Metin Sitti ; Yiching A. Liang; Anne M. Peattie; Wendy R. Hansen; Simon Sponberg; Thomas W. Kenny; Ronald Fearing; Jacob N. Israelachvili; Robert J. Full. Evidence for van der Waals adhesion in gecko setae. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 2002, 99, 12252–12256. doi:10.1073/pnas.192252799
  3. ^ G. Huber, H. Mantz, R. Spolenak, K. Mecke, K. Jacobs, S. N. Gorb, and E. Arzt. Evidence for capillarity contributions to gecko adhesion from single spatula nanomechanical measurements. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 2005, 102, 16293–16296. doi:10.1073/pnas.0506328102
  4. ^ Will Knight (2003-06-01), Gecko-like robot scampers up the wall, New Scientist, doi:10.1038/nmat917), archived from the original on 2007-12-13, retrieved 2009-05-02, Journal reference: Nature Materials (DOI: 10.1038/nmat917)
  5. ^ Synthetic gecko foot-hairs leading to reusable adhesives, University of Akron press release, 12 August 2005
  6. ^ Gecko-like robot scampers up the wall, New Scientist, 2006-05-23, p. 29, archived from the original on 2007-12-16, retrieved 2009-05-02
  7. ^ Gecko-like glue is said to be stickiest yet, "reuters.com" 08 Oct 2008
  8. ^ Nanotube adhesive sticks better than a gecko's foot, PhysOrg.com retrieved 7 July 2007
  9. ^ http://www.nsf.gov/discoveries/disc_summ.jsp?cntn_id=112442&org=NSF

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