4.5 Article

Changes in materials properties explain the effects of humidity on gecko adhesion

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 213, Issue 21, Pages 3699-3704

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.047654

Keywords

gecko; adhesion; van der Waals; capillary force; materials properties

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [NBM 0900723, IOS 0847953]
  2. Directorate For Engineering
  3. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn [0900723] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Geckos owe their remarkable stickiness to millions of dry setae on their toes, and the mechanism of adhesion in gecko setae has been the topic of scientific scrutiny for over two centuries. Previously, we demonstrated that van der Waals forces are sufficient for strong adhesion and friction in gecko setae, and that water-based capillary adhesion is not required. However, recent studies demonstrated that adhesion increases with relative humidity (RH) and proposed that surface hydration and capillary water bridge formation is important or even necessary. In this study, we confirmed a significant effect of RH on gecko adhesion, but rejected the capillary adhesion hypothesis. While contact forces of isolated tokay gecko setal arrays increased with humidity, the increase was similar on hydrophobic and hydrophilic surfaces, inconsistent with a capillary mechanism. Contact forces increased with RH even at high shear rates, where capillary bridge formation is too slow to affect adhesion. How then can a humidity-related increase in adhesion and friction be explained? The effect of RH on the mechanical properties of setal beta-keratin has escaped consideration until now. We discovered that an increase in RH softens setae and increases viscoelastic damping, which increases adhesion. Changes in setal materials properties, not capillary forces, fully explain humidity-enhanced adhesion, and van der Waals forces remain the only empirically supported mechanism of adhesion in geckos.

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