4.6 Article

Survival of polymeric microstructures subjected to interrogatory touch

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 16, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0255980

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CBET-1929748, ECCS-1542148]
  2. Center for Wearable Sensors in the Jacobs School of Engineering at the University of California San Diego
  3. Honda
  4. Dexcom
  5. Samsung
  6. Huami
  7. PepsiCo
  8. Gore
  9. Sony
  10. Corning
  11. Merck KGaA

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Polymeric arrays of microrelief structures have potential applications in influencing wettability, as biologically inspired adhesives, resisting biofouling, and affecting tactile interaction. The research investigates the damage to micropillar arrays caused by sliding a silicone cast of a human finger, concluding that parameters like aspect ratio, diameter, spacing, and modulus play important roles in survivability and damage types. The study also developed a model to describe the bending of micropillars, indicating the forces they experience during contact.
Polymeric arrays of microrelief structures have a range of potential applications. For example, to influence wettability, to act as biologically inspired adhesives, to resist biofouling, and to play a role in the feel of an object during tactile interaction. Here, we investigate the damage to micropillar arrays comprising pillars of different modulus, spacing, diameter, and aspect ratio due to the sliding of a silicone cast of a human finger. The goal is to determine the effect of these parameters on the types of damage observed, including adhesive failure and ploughing of material from the finger onto the array. Our experiments point to four principal conclusions [1]. Aspect ratio is the dominant parameter in determining survivability through its effect on the bending stiffness of micropillars [2]. All else equal, micropillars with larger diameter are less susceptible to breakage and collapse [3]. The spacing of pillars in the array largely determines which type of adhesive failure occurs in non-surviving arrays [4]. Elastic modulus plays an important role in survivability. Clear evidence of elastic recovery was seen in the more flexible polymer and this recovery led to more instances of pristine survivability where the stiffer polymer tended to ablate PDMS. We developed a simple model to describe the observed bending of micropillars, based on the quasi-static mechanics of beam-columns, that indicated they experience forces ranging from 10(-4)-10(-7) N to deflect into adhesive contact. Taken together, results obtained using our framework should inform design considerations for microstructures intended to be handled by human users.

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