Scientists already know that the tiny hairs on geckos toe pads enable them to cling, like Velcro, to vertical surfaces. Now, University of Akron researchers are unfolding clues to the reptiles gripping power in wet conditions in order to create a synthetic adhesive that sticks when moist or on wet surfaces. Place a single water droplet on the sole of a gecko toe, and the pad repels the water. The anti-wetting property helps explain how geckos maneuver in rainy tropical conditions. However, saturate that same toe pad in water or drench the surface on which it climbs, and adhesion slips away, the researchers say.
As researcher Alyssa Stark, a doctoral candidate in UAs Integrated Bioscience Program and research team leader explains, geckos dont fall from trees during downpours in the tropics. What, then, makes them stick? The team hopes to make that discovery in order to create synthetic materials that hold their grip in wet environments, such as inside the body, for surgical procedures.
Findings by Stark, Timothy Sullivan, who received his bachelors degree in biology in May, and Peter Niewiarowski, UA professor of biology and integrated bioscience, are published in latest issue of The Journal of Experimental Biology.
"Were gathering many clues about how geckos interact with wet surfaces and this gives us ideas of how to design adhesives that work under water," says Ali Dhinojwala, UA department of polymer science chair and Morton professor of polymer science. "Nature gives us a certain set of rules that point us in the right direction. They help us understand limitations and how to manipulate materials."
A geckos adhesion is tested on a wet surface. Stark and her research team members tested gecko toe hair adhesion in a series of scenarios: dry toe pads on dry, misted and wet surfaces and soaked toe pads on dry, misted and wet glass. The soaked toe pads demonstrated low to no adhesion proportionately with the wetness of the surface on which they were applied and pulled. Likewise, dry toe pads lost their adhesive grip increasingly with the amount of water applied to the surface upon which they were pulled. For the experiments, geckos were pulled on a glass surface by way of a small, gentle harness placed around their midsections.
"There were anecdotes before the study that geckos cant stick to wet glass. We now know it is a bit more complicated than that. What we expect to learn is going to be relevant to synthetics and ther capabilities to work not only on dry surfaces, but also wet and maybe, submerged ones," Niewiarowski says. "This implies a more versatile adhesive capability."
After close study of the tiny hairs at the bottom of gecko feet that enable them to cling to surfaces, Dhinojwala and his colleagues have already developed a dry synthetic adhesive, comprised of carbon nanotubes, that outperforms natures variety. Now, with these new findings, Dhinojwala and his colleagues are one step closer to unfolding the secrets behind gecko toe adhesion in wetness.
The researchers plan to further study the lizards in their natural habitats and in laboratory conditions that simulate them. Theyll investigate grasping and release mechanisms, habits of the geckos in wet environments and other factors that enable the lizards to adhere to surfaces in wetness, such as to trees during rainfalls.
"Our goal is to go back and look at what theyre doing in nature and at what kind of surfaces they are walking or running on," says Stark, noting that UA researchers have already studied such behavior of geckos in Tahiti.
The University of Akron is the public research university for Northeast Ohio. The Princeton Review listed UA among the "Best in the Midwest" in its 2011 edition of Best Colleges: Region-by-Region. Nearly 30,000 students are enrolled in UAs 300 associate, bachelors, masters, doctoral and law degree programs and 100 certificate programs at sites in Summit, Wayne, Medina and Holmes counties.
本站所有信息与内容,版权归原作者所有。网站中部分新闻、文章来源于网络或会员供稿,如读者对作品版权有疑议,请及时与我们联系,电话:025-85303363 QQ:2402955403。文章仅代表作者本人的观点,与本网站立场无关。转载本站的内容,请务必注明"来源:林中祥胶粘剂技术信息网(www.adhesive-lin.com)".
©2015 南京爱德福信息科技有限公司 苏ICP备10201337 | 技术支持:南京联众网络科技有限公司