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Engineers Create Gecko-Inspired, High-Friction
Micro-Fibers
Inspired by the remarkable hairs that
allow geckos to hang single-toed from sheer walls and
scamper along ceilings, a team of researchers led by
engineers at the University of California, Berkeley,
has created an array of synthetic micro-fibers that
uses very high friction to support loads on smooth surfaces.
High-friction materials can prevent sliding under high
loads or steep inclines. The researchers found that
the synthetic array of polypropylene fibers could hold
a quarter to a glass slide inclined at an 80 degree
angle, yet is not "sticky" like adhesive tape.
The fibers, packed 42 million per square centimeter,
each measured a mere 20 microns long and 0.6 microns
in diameter, or about 100 times thinner than a human
hair.
"We think the result represents an important milestone
in our ongoing research project to understand gecko
adhesion," said Ronald Fearing, UC Berkeley professor
of electrical engineering and computer sciences and
principal investigator of the project.
The researchers are careful to point out that unlike
gecko hairs, the micro-fiber array does not exhibit
adhesion. Adhesion describes the resistance of an object
to being pulled off a surface, while friction describes
the resistance to being dragged or slid along a surface.
Thus, a person should not use a micro-fiber suit to
attempt Spiderman stunts.
Using only a sheet of
micro-fiber array on its back — without any traditional
adhesive — a quarter clings to a glass slide inclined
at a steep, 80-degree angle. (Photo courtesy of the
Fearing Group, UC Berkeley))
The researchers attribute the low adhesion
to the fibers' tendency to straighten out and stiffen
up – thus breaking contact – when they are
pulled away from the surface.
"Ultimately, what we'd like to have is something
with high friction but can, with certain motions, also
achieve adhesion," said Carmel Majidi, UC Berkeley
graduate student in electrical engineering and computer
sciences and lead author of the micro-fiber array paper.
Nevertheless, practical applications may yet be found
for these micro-fiber arrays. High friction and low
adhesion are desirable traits for products such as shoe
soles, car tires and a variety of athletic equipment.
Soft materials such as rubber are now used for these
products, but the researchers note that a stiff polymer
could possibly stand up to higher temperatures and wear
better than such materials.
"With rubber, you control friction and adhesive
properties by changing its chemical formulations,"
said Fearing. "For the micro-fiber array, we just
change its geometry and mechanical properties. Thicker,
fatter fibers, for instance, reduce the amount of friction
created."
Moreover, high-friction rubber tends to become "sticky,"
said Fearing. "The polypropylene micro-fibers are
a new class of material that shows some of the advantages
of rubber without the stickiness."
Fearing was among a team of researchers that, six years
ago, described the force that most likely enables geckos
to scale walls and ceilings. It had been known that
geckos' five-toed feet are each covered with millions
of tiny hairs called setae, and like split ends, each
seta branches out into billions of nanoscale spatulae.
The scientists, including UC Berkeley biologist Robert
Full, Lewis and Clark College biologist Kellar Autumn
and Stanford University engineer Thomas Kenny, found
that the network of gecko hairs forms intermolecular
bonds with the surface by means of van der Waals forces.
Those forces only come into play when surfaces get intimately
close. When millions of gecko hairs make contact, they
collectively create a powerful bond that is a thousand
times stronger than the force geckos need to hang onto
a wall.
Two years later, members of the same research team synthesized
gecko hair tips that stick, providing the first direct
experimental verification of a van der Waals mechanism
for gecko foot-hair adhesion.
Even more impressive is the gecko's ability to attach
and detach from the surface as many as 15 times per
second. "A gecko can control its adhesion, sticking
really well or detaching readily, and it's still unclear
how it does that," said Majidi.
The lizards are thus able to adhere strongly to a surface
with just the slightest step, something that research
teams around the world have yet to replicate.
This new research gets partway there by creating a micro-fiber
array that can engage an object to a smooth surface
with a light touch, and maintain the contact with friction.
"We've taken a very stiff material that has no
friction on its own, and by modifying the geometry alone,
without altering any of its chemical properties, we
were able to achieve this very high friction,"
said Majidi.
The more fibers that are in contact with the surface,
the greater the friction generated. The researchers
estimate that each fiber produces 200 nanonewtons of
shear resistance. A mere 39 nanonewtons is all that
is needed to bend one of the polypropylene fibers. (A
nanonewton is a force 1 billion times smaller than the
force of Earth's gravity exerted on an apple.) A stroke
on a computer keyboard, in comparison, typically requires
700 million nanonewtons.
Visit www.berkeley.edu

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