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Adhesion and sliding response of a biologically inspired fibrillar surface: experimental observations. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research aims to replicate the adhesive properties of animal foot pads, such as those seen in geckos and insects, focusing on their ability to switch easily between sticking and releasing.
  • This switching capability stems from the elastic anisotropy of the adhesive pads, which affects the direction and strength of the detachment process, as evidenced by the angled orientation of fibres in these biological systems.
  • A newly developed bio-inspired surface, featuring tilted fibrillar structures, showcases improved detachment force and energy dissipation, highlighting the significance of tilting and compliance in achieving directional variability in adhesion.

Article Abstract

Inspired by the adhesion mechanisms of several animal species such as geckos, beetles and flies, several efforts in designing and fabricating surface engineering strategies have been made recently to mimic the adhesive and frictional behaviour of biological foot pads. An important feature of such biological adhesion systems is the ability to switch between strong attachment and easy detachment, which is crucial for animal locomotion. Recent investigations have suggested that such a 'switching' mechanism can be achieved by the elastic anisotropy of the attachment pad, which renders the magnitude of the detachment force to be direction dependent. This suggestion is supported by the observations that the fibres of the foot pads in geckos and insects are oriented at an angle to the base and that geckos curl their toes backwards (digital hyperextension) while detaching from a surface. One of the promising bio-inspired architectures developed recently is a film-terminated fibrillar PDMS surface; this structure was demonstrated to result in superior detachment force and energy dissipation compared with a bulk PDMS surface. In this investigation, the film-terminated fibrillar architecture is modified by tilting the fibres to make the surface vertically more compliant and elastically anisotropic. The directional detachment and the sliding resistance between the tilted fibrillar surfaces and a spherical glass lens are measured: both show significant directional anisotropy. It is argued that the anisotropy introduced by the tilted fibres and the deformation-induced change in the compliance of the fibre layer are responsible for the observed anisotropy in the detachment force.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2607453PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2007.1225DOI Listing

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