Jump to content

Welcome to Grasscity Forums
Register now to gain access to all of our features. Once registered and logged in, you will be able to create topics, post replies to existing threads, give reputation to your fellow members, get your own private messenger, post status updates, manage your profile and so much more. This message will be removed once you have signed in.
Login to Account Create an Account
Photo

Amazing Gecko-Foot Glue Holds 700lb On A Smooth Wall

- - - - -

  • Please log in to reply
18 replies to this topic

#1
MelT

MelT

    Registered User

  • Registered
  • 4,257 posts
Gecko Feet Inspire Amazing Glue That Can Hold 700 Pounds On Smooth Wall

ScienceDaily (Feb. 16, 2012) — For years, biologists have been amazed by the power of gecko feet, which let these 5-ounce lizards produce an adhesive force roughly equivalent to carrying nine pounds up a wall without slipping. Now, a team of polymer scientists and a biologist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst have discovered exactly how the gecko does it, leading them to invent "Geckskin," a device that can hold 700 pounds on a smooth wall.

Posted Image
A card-sized pad of Geckskin can firmly attach very heavy objects such as this 42-inch television weighing about 40 lbs. (18 kg) to a smooth vertical surface. The key innovation by Bartlett and colleagues was to create a soft pad woven into a stiff fabric that includes a synthetic tendon. Together these features allow the stiff yet flexible pad to “drape” over a surface to maximize contact. (Credit: Photo courtesy of UMass Amherst)


Doctoral candidate Michael Bartlett in Alfred Crosby's polymer science and engineering lab at UMass Amherst is the lead author of their article describing the discovery in the current online issue of Advanced Materials. The group includes biologist Duncan Irschick, a functional morphologist who has studied the gecko's climbing and clinging abilities for over 20 years. Geckos are equally at home on vertical, slanted, even backward-tilting surfaces.
"Amazingly, gecko feet can be applied and disengaged with ease, and with no sticky residue remaining on the surface," Irschick says. These properties, high-capacity, reversibility and dry adhesion offer a tantalizing possibility for synthetic materials that can easily attach and detach heavy everyday objects such as televisions or computers to walls, as well as medical and industrial applications, among others, he and Crosby say.
This combination of properties at these scales has never been achieved before, the authors point out. Crosby says, "Our Geckskin device is about 16 inches square [16 square inches] about the size of an index card, and can hold a maximum force of about 700 pounds while adhering to a smooth surface such as glass."
Beyond its impressive sticking ability, the device can be released with negligible effort and reused many times with no loss of effectiveness. For example, it can be used to stick a 42-inch television to a wall, released with a gentle tug and restuck to another surface as many times as needed, leaving no residue.
Previous efforts to synthesize the tremendous adhesive power of gecko feet and pads were based on the qualities of microscopic hairs on their toes called setae, but efforts to translate them to larger scales were unsuccessful, in part because the complexity of the entire gecko foot was not taken into account. As Irschick explains, a gecko's foot has several interacting elements, including tendons, bones and skin, that work together to produce easily reversible adhesion.
Now he, Bartlett, Crosby and the rest of the UMass Amherst team have unlocked the simple yet elegant secret of how it's done, to create a device that can handle excessively large weights. Geckskin and its supporting theory demonstrate that setae are not required for gecko-like performance, Crosby points out. "It's a concept that has not been considered in other design strategies and one that may open up new research avenues in gecko-like adhesion in the future."
The key innovation by Bartlett and colleagues was to create an integrated adhesive with a soft pad woven into a stiff fabric, which allows the pad to "drape" over a surface to maximize contact. Further, as in natural gecko feet, the skin is woven into a synthetic "tendon," yielding a design that plays a key role in maintaining stiffness and rotational freedom, the researchers explain.
Importantly, the Geckskin's adhesive pad uses simple everyday materials such as polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), which holds promise for developing an inexpensive, strong and durable dry adhesive.
The UMass Amherst researchers are continuing to improve their Geckskin design by drawing on lessons from the evolution of gecko feet, which show remarkable variation in anatomy. "Our design for Geckskin shows the true integrative power of evolution for inspiring synthetic design that can ultimately aid humans in many ways," says Irschick.
The work was supported by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) through a subcontract to Draper Laboratories, plus UMass Amherst research funds.

#2
Thunderstruck

Thunderstruck

    Registered User

  • Registered
  • 1,440 posts
I think it was a TED video that showed them when they were first testing out the pad they made. They put one of the researchers little girl in a harness and she hung from it while it was on the wall. was pretty funny.

This technology is my "go to" example of how we can take an example from nature that seems so simple but there is a powerful idea that we can pull out of it and use it.

#3
Broses

Broses

    the green bastard

  • Registered
  • 4,226 posts
alright.. so does this mean with the right gloves i can be spiderman?

#4
SwichOne

SwichOne

    No thought is true. Ever.

  • Registered
  • 7,041 posts
damn this is awesome, think of all the holes we wont have to drill into our homes for mounting shit in the future.......this is fuckin sweet.

#5
Mikayote

Mikayote

    Registered User

  • Registered
  • 736 posts
Modular cabinets come to mind. Instead of having to mount each cabinet in your kitchen/bathroom, just stick it where you can reach it. The costs for modifying a kitchen if you're disabled are outrageous right now.

#6
Jamaican Hotbox

Jamaican Hotbox

    Registered User

  • Registered
  • 4,153 posts
I'm gonna climbs building with this shit. Just gotta get over my fear of heights first

#7
yurigadaisukida

yurigadaisukida

    Registered User

  • Registered
  • 5,836 posts

alright.. so does this mean with the right gloves i can be spiderman?


Yes in fact u will probly see such gloves on the market soon

#8
dishin reg

dishin reg

    Banned

  • Banned by Moderators
  • 895 posts

alright.. so does this mean with the right gloves i can be spiderman?



http://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcS2WG-Ar4KNeRC2uzKSEsTcywN1s_E845r3wXtYt1xLXYOKHALIZazpBeoWAg

That's ingenious.. oooh the possibilities..

#9
The Botanist

The Botanist

    Good, Good.

  • Registered
  • 2,746 posts
If only you could toggle it on/off...

#10
yurigadaisukida

yurigadaisukida

    Registered User

  • Registered
  • 5,836 posts

If only you could toggle it on/off...


You can its easy. I don't really know how explain it but basically just lift your hand

#11
Thunderstruck

Thunderstruck

    Registered User

  • Registered
  • 1,440 posts
I love the pictures they show. One of them is a close up of the "hairs" that they mimicked from the animal in order to make the "tape"

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ys9WQ15rSFs]Gecko-like tape holds up 42-inch TV - YouTube[/ame]

#12
WaGreenGuru

WaGreenGuru

    WA-MMP

  • Registered
  • 1,166 posts
Lols I used to have a tokay gecko, Untill it climbed up the glass and escaped...

Cool stuff though. Cant wait for it to be on the market. Like the others have said. It has endless possibilities.

#13
BigBadBong

BigBadBong

    Burning Bud

  • Registered
  • PipPip
  • 27 posts
Not trying to disprove the spiderman glove or anything, but if the glue is extremely sticky and can hold 700lbs, the energy required to just "lift your hand" and remove the glove from the surface would be pretty hard...

#14
Dissec

Dissec

    Registered User

  • Registered
  • 4,339 posts

Not trying to disprove the spiderman glove or anything, but if the glue is extremely sticky and can hold 700lbs, the energy required to just "lift your hand" and remove the glove from the surface would be pretty hard...


The original post said it could be removed with negligible force, just a slight tug, so i'm guessing its not that hard.

#15
yurigadaisukida

yurigadaisukida

    Registered User

  • Registered
  • 5,836 posts

Not trying to disprove the spiderman glove or anything, but if the glue is extremely sticky and can hold 700lbs, the energy required to just "lift your hand" and remove the glove from the surface would be pretty hard...


You should read up on it. This us not a problem. Otherwise geckos would be stuck to walls.

Bassically its more like claws then tape. There is a patch of "hair" that is literally just atoms thick and it can grip into the grooves of almost any surface. No matter how smooth a surface is at the microscopic scale its still rough. You simply lift your hand and unhinge the glove

#16
tok3r

tok3r

    Lurker

  • Registered
  • 564 posts
goodjob umass cant wait to try this stuff.

#17
Thunderstruck

Thunderstruck

    Registered User

  • Registered
  • 1,440 posts

Not trying to disprove the spiderman glove or anything, but if the glue is extremely sticky and can hold 700lbs, the energy required to just "lift your hand" and remove the glove from the surface would be pretty hard...


like others said it's not actually a glue. There are "hairs" on it that get so close to the surface of what you put it on that it uses magnetic forces to stay in place. The way you take it off is by curling it back, kinda like how you take a piece of tape off.

here's the ted talk about how they discovered it and then made a robot that uses it.

Robert Full: Learning from the gecko's tail | Video on TED.com

#18
g0pher

g0pher

    Durban Poison

  • Registered
  • 1,307 posts
Our kids will have cool toys
this plus those genetic engereered mice that increased their strength six fold and you have spiderman minus the cartridge

#19
TheAtmansPath

TheAtmansPath

    Registered User

  • Registered
  • 4,883 posts
fuck


yea.


I want gecko gloves / shoes so bad, just walk up walls and shit like a badass. Id go to the mall, blow some minds, you know the deal.




ahhh science :smoke:




0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users