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'''Synthetic setae''' emulate the [[setae]] found on the toes of a [[gecko]] and scientific research in this area is driven towards the development of [[Dry glue|dry adhesive]]s. Geckos have no difficulty mastering vertical walls and are apparently capable of adhering themselves to just about any surface. The 5-toed feet of a gecko are covered with elastic hairs called setae and the end of these hairs are split into nanoscale structures called [[Spatulae (biology)|spatulae]] (because of their resemblance to actual [[spatula]]s). The sheer abundance and proximity to the surface of these spatulae make it sufficient for [[van der Waals force]]s alone to provide the required [[adhesion|adhesive]] strength.<ref>{{Cite web| title = Evidence for van der Waals adhesion in gecko setae | author = Kellar Autumn, [[Metin Sitti]], Yiching A. Liang, Anne M. Peattie†i, Wendy R. Hansen, Simon Sponberg, Thomas W. Kenny, Ronald Fearing, Jacob N. Israelachvili, and Robert J. Full | publisher = PNAS | date = 27 August 2002 | url = http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/192252799v1 }}</ref> Following the discovery of the gecko’s adhesion mechanism in 2002, which is based on van der Waals forces, biomimetic adhesives have become the topic of a major research effort. These developments are poised to yield families of novel adhesive materials with superior properties which are likely to find uses in industries ranging from defence and nanotechnology to healthcare and sport.
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[[File:Stickybot.jpg|right|thumb|400px|Stickybot – A Climbing Robot using Synthetic Setae<ref>[http://bdml.stanford.edu/twiki/bin/view/Rise/StickyBot Biomimetics and Dexterous Manipulation Labtory,Stanford University]</ref>]]
 
==Basic principles==
[[File:Gecko foot on glass.JPG|right|thumb|250px|Close view of a gecko's foot]]
Geckos are renowned for their exceptional ability to stick and run on any vertical and inverted surface (excluding [[Teflon]]<ref>[http://www.sciencentral.com/articles/view.php3?language=english&type=&article_id=218392449 Gecko Tape – 6 Jan 2005 – Sciencentral]</ref>). However gecko toes are not sticky in the usual way like chemical adhesives.  Instead, they can detach from the surface quickly and remain quite clean around everyday contaminants even without grooming.
 
===Extraordinary adhesion===
The two front feet of a [[tokay gecko]] can withstand 20.1 N of force parallel to the surface with 227&nbsp;mm<sup>2</sup> of pad area,<ref>Irschick DJ, Austin CC, Petren K, Fisher R, Losos JB, Ellers 0 (1996) A comparative analysis of
clinging ability among pad-bearing lizards. Eiol J Linnaean Soc 59:21–35</ref> a force as much as 40 times the gecko's weight. Scientists have been investigating the secret of this extraordinary adhesion ever since the 19th century, and at least seven possible mechanisms for gecko adhesion have been discussed over the past 175 years. There have been hypotheses of '''glue''', '''friction''', '''suction''', '''[[electrostatics]]''', '''micro-interlocking''' and '''[[intermolecular forces]]'''. Sticky secretions were ruled out first early in the study of gecko adhesion since geckos lack glandular tissue on their toes. The friction hypothesis was also dismissed quickly because the friction force only acts in shear which cannot explain the adhesive capabilities of geckos on inverted surfaces. The hypothesis that the toe pads act as suction cups was dispelled in 1934 by experiments carried out in a vacuum in which the gecko's toes remained stuck. Similarly, the electrostatic hypothesis was refuted by an experiment showing that geckos could still adhere even when the build-up of electrostatic charge was impossible (such as on a metal surface in air ionized by a stream of x-rays). The mechanism of microinterlocking which suggested that the curved tips of [[setae]] could act as microscale hooks was also challenged by the fact that geckos generate large adhesive forces even on molecularly smooth surfaces.
 
[[File:Micro and nano view of gecko's toe.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Micro and nano view of gecko's toe<ref name=bu/>]]
The possibilities finally narrowed down to intermolecular forces, and the development of electron [[microscopy]] in the 1950s, which revealed the micro-structure of the '''[[setae]]''' on the gecko's foot, provided further proof to support this hypothesis. The problem was finally solved in 2000 by a research team led by biologists Kellar Autumn of Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon, and Robert Full at the University of California at Berkeley.<ref>Autumn, K., Liang, Y.A., Hsieh, S.T., Zesch, W., Chan,W-P.,Kenny, W.T., Fearing, R. and Full, R.J. (2000), “Adhesive force of a single gecko foot-hair”, Nature, Vol. 405,pp. 681–5.</ref> They showed that the underside of a gecko toe typically bears a series of ridges, which are covered with uniform ranks of setae, and each setae further divides into hundreds of split ends and flat tips called '''[[spatulas]]''' (see figure on the right). A single seta of the tokay gecko is roughly 110 micrometers long and 4.2 micrometers wide. Each of a seta's branches ends in a thin, triangular spatula connected at its apex. The end is about 0.2 micrometers long and 0.2 micrometers wide.<ref name=bu>[https://webdisk.lclark.edu/xythoswfs/webui/_xy-1594799_1-t_d9VVAITO Autumn, K. (2006). How gecko toes stick. American Scientist 94, 124–132.]</ref> The adhesion between gecko's foot and the surfaces is exactly the result of the [[Van der Waals force]] between each seta and the surface molecules. A single seta can generate up to 200<math>\mu</math>N of force<ref>Autumn, K., Liang, Y. A., Hsieh, S. T., Zesch, W., Chan, W.-P., Kenny, W. T.,
Fearing, R. & Full, R. J. (2000) Nature 405, 681–685.</ref> There are about 14,400 setae per square millimeter on the foot of a tokay gecko, which leads to a total number of about 3,268,800 setae on a tokay gecko's two front feet. From the equation for intermolecular potential:
:<math>\Phi (R,D)=-\frac{\rho_1\rho_2\pi^2\alpha R}{6 D}</math>
where <math>\rho_1</math> and <math>\rho_2</math> are the number of contacts of the two surfaces, R is the radius of each contact and D is the distance between the two surfaces.
 
We find that the intermolecular force, or the van der Waals force in this case between two surfaces is greatly dominated by the number of contacts. This is exactly the reason why the gecko's feet can generate extraordinary adhesion force to different kinds of surfaces. The combined effect of millions of spatulae provides an adhesive force many times greater than the gecko needs to hang from a ceiling by one foot.
 
[[File:Lift-off mechanism.jpg|right|thumb|250px| Attach and Detach procedure of gecko's foot<ref name=bu/>]]
 
===Lift-off mechanism===
The surprisingly large forces generated by the gecko's toes made us wonder how geckos manage to lift their feet so quickly – in just 15 milliseconds – with no measurable detachment forces. A few years ago, Kellar Autumn and his research group found out the '' 'Lift-off mechanism' '' of the gecko's feet. Their discovery revealed that gecko adhesive actually works in a 'programmable' way that by increasing the angle between the setal shaft and the substrate to 30 degrees, no matter how big the perpendicular adhesive force is, geckos 'turn off' the stickiness since the increased stress at the trailing edge of the seta causes the bonds between seta and the substrate to break.The seta then returns to an unloaded default state. On the other hand, by applying preload and dragging along the surface, the geckos turn on the modulate stickiness. This 'Lift-off' mechanism can be shown in the figure on the right.
 
===Self-cleaning ability===
Unlike conventional adhesives, gecko adhesive becomes cleaner with repeated use, and thus stays quite clean around everyday contaminants such as sand, dust, leaf litter and pollen. In addition, unlike some plants and insects that have the ability of self-cleaning by droplets, geckos are not known to groom their feet in order to retain their adhesive properties – all they need is only a few steps to recover their ability to cling to ''vertical surfaces.
 
[[File:Model for self cleaning.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Model explaining self-cleaning ability<ref name=sc/>]]
 
Kellar Autumn and his research group have conducted experiments to test and demonstrate this ability of the gecko.<ref name=sc>[http://www.pnas.org/content/102/2/385.full.pdf+html Hansen, W. and Autumn, K. (2005). Evidence for self-cleaning in gecko setae. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 102, 385–389.]</ref> They also use the contact mechanical model to suggest that self-cleaning occurs by an energetic disequilibrium between the adhesive forces attracting a dirt particle to the substrate and those attracting the same particle to one or more spatulae. In other words, the Van der Waals interaction energy for the particle-wall system requires a sufficiently great number of particle-spatula systems to counterbalance; however, relatively few spatulae can actually attach to a single particle, therefore the contaminant particles tend to attach to the substrate surface rather than the gecko's toe due to this disequilibrium. Figure on the right shows the model of interaction between N spatulas, a dirt particle and a planar wall.
 
It's important to know that this property of self-cleaning appears intrinsic to the setal nano-structure and therefore should be replicable in synthetic adhesive materials.  In fact, Kellar Autumn's group observed how self-cleaning still occurred in arrays of setae when isolated from the geckos used.
 
==Development & Approaches==
[[File:Development of biomimetic adhesives.jpg|right|thumb|280px|Number of papers published on "gecko adhesive" 2002~2007<ref name=dev>Biomimetic adhesives: A review of recent developments,Assembly Automation, v 28, n 4, p 282-288, 2008,Fastenings and Adhesives</ref>]]
The discoveries about gecko's feet led to the idea that these structures and mechanisms might be exploited in a new family of adhesives, and research groups from around the world are now investigating this concept. And thanks to the development of nano science and technology, people are now able to create biomimetic adhesive inspired by gecko's setae using [[nanostructures]]. Indeed, interest and new discoveries in gecko-type adhesives are booming, as illustrated by the growing number of papers published on this topic.<ref name=dev/> however, synthetic setae are still at a very early stage.
<!--There are growing list of benchmark properties can be used to evaluate the degree of geckolike function of synthetic prototypes, one of which is adhesion coefficient, defined as:
 
<math>\mu^'=F_{adhesion}/F_{preload}</math>
 
where <math>F_{preload}</math> is the applied preload force, and <math>F_{adhesion}</math> is the generated adhesion force.
The adhesion coefficient of real gecko setae is 8~16, while those of existing works of synthetic setae are relative low. For example:
 
*The material of [[Andre Geim]] et al. (2003)<ref>Geim AK, Dubonos SV, Grigorieva IV, [[Konstantin Novoselov|Novoselov KS]], Zhukov AA (2003) Microfabricated adhesive mimicking gecko foot-hair. Nature Mat 2461-463</ref> is not geckolike since it requires a very large preload of 50N to yield 3N and 0.3 atm of adhesion, yielding a value of <math>\mu^'=0.06</math>   
 
*The synthetic setae of Northern and Turner(2005)<ref>Norrhen MT, Turner KL (2005) A batch of fabricated dry adhesive. Nanotechnology 16:1159-1 166</ref> perform significantly better with a <math>\mu^'=0.125</math>, but still below the benchmark of real gecko setae
 
* Ali Dhinojwala and others from University of Akron and Renesselar Polytechnic Institute published their description of a carbon-nanotube carpet that generated adhesive force even greater than that of gecko setae in 2005. However, this product only works at a nanometer scale rather than the centimeter scale of real gecko toes.-->
 
===Effective Design===
Effective design of geckolike adhesives will require deep understanding of the principles underlying the properties observed in the natural system. These properties, principles, and related parameters of the gecko adhesive system are shown in the following table.<ref>[https://webdisk.lclark.edu/xythoswfs/webui/_xy-1594742_1-t_7hPWA31Q Autumn, K. (2006). Properties, principles, and parameters of the gecko adhesive system. In Biological Adhesives,  eds. A. Smith and J. Callow), pp. 225–255. Berlin Heidelberg: Springer Verlag.]</ref> This table also gives us an insight into how scientists translate those good properties of gecko's setae(as shown in the first column) into the parameters they can actually control and design (as shown in the third column).
 
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Properties
! Principles
! parameters
|-
| 1.Anisotropic attachment
2.High <math>\mu^'</math>(pulloff/preload)
| Cantilever beam
| Shaft length,radius,density,shaft angle
|-
| 3.Low detachment force
| Low effective stiffness
| Shaft modulus, spatular shape
|-
| 4.Material independence stickiness
| Van der Waals mechanism
JKR-like<sup>*</sup> [[contact mechanics]]
Nanoarray(divided contact)
| Spatular size
Spatular Shape
Spatular density
|-
| 5.Self-cleaning ability
| Nanoarray(divided contact)
| Spatular bulk modulus
|-
| 6.Anti-self-stickiness
| small contact area
| particle size,shape,surface energy
|-
| 7.Nonsticky default state
| Nonsticky spatulae,Hydrophobic, Van der Waals force
| Spatular size,shape,surface energy
|}
<nowiki>*</nowiki>JKR refers to the Johnson, Kendall, Roberts model of adhesion<ref>Johnson KL, Kendall K, Roberts AD (1973) Surface energy and the contact of elastic solids. Proc R Soc Lond Ser A 324310-313</ref>
 
In summary, the key parameters in the design of synthetic gecko adhesive include:
 
*'''Pattern''' and '''periodicity''' of the synthetic setae
*'''Hierarchical''' structure
*'''Length''','''diameter''','''angle''' and '''stiffness''' of the shafts
*'''Size''','''shape''' and '''stiffness''' of the spatulas(end of the satae)
*'''Flexibility''' of the substrate
 
There are growing list of benchmark properties that can be used to evaluate the effectiveness of synthetic setae, and '''adhesion coefficient''', which is defined as:
 
<math>\mu^'=F_{adhesion}/F_{preload}</math>
 
where <math>F_{preload}</math> is the applied preload force, and <math>F_{adhesion}</math> is the generated adhesion force.
The adhesion coefficient of real gecko setae is typically 8~16.
 
===Materials===
In the first developments of synthetic setae, [[polymers]] like [[polyimide]], [[polypropylene]] and [[polydimethylsiloxane]](PDMS)are frequently used since they are flexible and easily fabricated. Later, as nanotechnology rapidly developed, [[Carbon Nanotubes]](CNTs) are preferred by most research groups and used in most recent projects. CNTs have much larger possible length-to-diameter ratio than polymers, and they exhibit both extraordinary strength and flexibility, as well as good electrical properties. It is these novel properties that make synthetic setae more  effective.
 
===Fabrication Techniques===
A number of [[Microelectromechanical systems|MEMS]]/[[Nanoelectromechanical systems|NEMS]] fabriction techniques are applied to the fabrication of synthetic setae, which include [[photolithography]]/[[electron beam lithography]], [[plasma etching]], [[deep reactive ion etching]](DRIE), [[chemical vapour deposition]](CVD),and micro-moulding,etc.
 
===Examples===
In this section, several typical examples will be given to show the design and fabrication process of synthetic setae. We can also gain an insight into the development of this biomimetic technology over the past few years from these examples.
 
===="Gecko Tape"====
[[File:Micro view of Gecko Tape.jpg|left|thumb|250px| Micro view of "[[Gecko tape]]"<ref name=ex1/>]]
[[File:Test of gecko tape.jpg|right|thumb|150px| "Spider-Man test " of "Gecko tape"<ref name=ex1/>]]
This example is one of the first developments of synthetic setae, which arose from a collaboration between the [[Manchester Centre for Mesoscience and Nanotechnology]], and the Institute for Microelectronics Technology in Russia. Work started in 2001 and 2 years later results were published in Nature Materials.<ref name=ex1>[[Andre Geim|Geim, A.K.]], Dubonos, S.V., Grigorieva, I.V., [[Konstantin Novoselov|Novoselov, K.S.]], Zhukov, A.A. and Shapoval, S.Y. (2003), “Microfabricated adhesive mimicking gecko foot-hair”, Nature Materials,Vol. 2, pp. 461–3.</ref>
 
The group prepared flexible fibres of polyimide as the synthetic setae structures on the surface of a 5<math>\mu</math>m thick film of the same material using electron beam lithography and dry etching in an oxygen plasma. The fibres were '''2<math>\mu</math>m long''', with a '''diameter of around 500&nbsp;nm''' and '''a periodicity of 1.6<math>\mu</math>m''', and covered an area of roughly '''''1&nbsp;cm<sup>2</sup>''''' (see figure on the left). Initially, the team used a [[silicon wafer]] as a substrate but found that the tape’s adhesive power increased by almost 1,000 times if they used a soft bonding substrate such as Scotch tape – This is because the flexible substrate yields a much higher ratio of the number of setae in contact with the surface over the total number of setae.
 
The result of this "gecko tape" was tested by attaching a sample to the hand of a 15&nbsp;cm high plastic Spider-Man figure weighing 40g, which enabled it to stick to a glass ceiling, as is shown in the figure. The tape, which had a contact area of around 0.5&nbsp;cm<sup>2</sup> with the glass, was able to carry a load of more than '''100g'''. However, the adhesion coefficient is only 0.06, which is low compared with real gecko(8~16).
 
===="Nanotube Synthetic Gecko Foot Hair"====
[[File:Micro view of CNTs synthetic setae.jpg|right|thumb|250px| Micro view of the "Nanotube Synthetic Gecko Foot Hair"]]
As nanoscience and nanotechnology develop, more and more recent{{when|date=May 2012}} projects involve the application of nanotechnology, notably the use of carbon nanotubes (CNTs). In 2005, researchers from the University of Akron and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA, created synthetic setae structures by depositing multiwalled CNTs by chemical vapour deposition onto quartz and silicon substrates<ref name=ex2>Yurdumakan, B., Raravikar, N.R., Ajayan, P.M. and Dhinojwala, A.(2005),Synthetic gecko foot-hairs from multiwalled carbon nanotubes,Chemical Communications,Vol. 2005, pp. 3799–801.</ref>
 
The nanotubes were typically '''10–20&nbsp;nm in diameter''' and around '''65<math>\mu</math>m''' long.The group then encapsulated the vertically aligned nanotubes in PMMA polymer before exposing the top 25<math>\mu</math>m of the tubes by etching away some of the polymer. The nanotubes tended to form entangled bundles about '''50&nbsp;nm in diameter''' because of the solvent drying process used after etching.(As is shown in the figure on the right)
 
The results were tested with a [[scanning probe microscope]], and it showed that the minimum force per unit area as '''1.6±0.5×10<sup>−2</sup>nN/nm<sup>2</sup>''', which is far larger than the figure the team estimated for the typical adhesive force of a gecko’s setae, which was 10<sup>−4</sup>nN/nm<sup>2</sup>. Later experiments<ref>Ge, L., Sethi, S., Ci, L., Ajayan, P.M. and Dhinojwala, A. (2007), “Carbon nanotube-based synthetic gecko tapes”, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, Vol. 104, pp. 10792–5.</ref> with the same structures on [[Scotch tape]] revealed that this material could support a shear stress of '''36N/cm<sup>2</sup>''', nearly '''four times higher''' than a gecko foot. This is phenomenal since '''this was the first time synthetic setae exhibited better properties than those of natural gecko foot'''. Moreover, this new material can adhere to a wider variety of materials, including glass and Teflon.
 
This new material has some problems though: When pulled parallel to a surface, the tape releases, not because the CNTs lose adhesion from the surface but because they break, and the tape cannot be reused in this case. Moreover, unlike gecko's setae, this material only works for small area(approx. 1&nbsp;cm<sup>2</sup>).
 
The researchers are currently working on a number of ways to strengthen the nanotubes and are also aiming to make the tape reusable thousands of times, rather than the dozens of times it can now be used.
 
===="Geckel"====
[[File:Micro view of geckel.jpg|right|thumb|250px| Micro view of the "Geckel"<ref name=ex3/>]]
[[File:Geckel.jpg|left|thumb|250px|"Geckel"<ref name=ex3/>]]
This example is novel, since whilst most developments concern dry adhesion, researchers from Northwestern University are also now studying how derivatives of naturally occurring compounds from [[molluscs]] can be combined with gecko-type structures to yield adhesives that will operate in both dry and wet conditions. Their research has been published in a recent paper in ''Nature.''<ref name=ex3>Lee, H., Lee, B.P. and Messersmith, P.B. (2007), “A reversible wet/dry adhesive inspired by mussels and geckos”, Nature, Vol. 448, pp. 338–41.</ref>
 
The "Geckel" is described to be an array of gecko-mimetic, '''400&nbsp;nm''' wide silicone pillars, fabricated by electron beam lithography and coated with a mussel-mimetic polymer poly(dopamine methacrylamide-comethoxyethylacrylate)– p(DMA-co-MEA), a synthetic form of the catecholic amino acid 3,4-dihydroxy-l-phenylalanine which occurs naturally in [[mussels]](shown in the figure on the left).
 
Unlike true gecko glue, the new material does not only depend on van der Waals forces for its adhesive properties; it also relies on the chemical interaction of the surface with the [[hydroxyl groups]] in the mussel protein. And the material improves wet adhesion '''15-fold''' compared with uncoated pillar arrays and the so-called “geckel” tape adheres through 1,000
contact and release cycles, sticking strongly in both wet and dry environments.
 
So far, the material has been tested on silicon nitride, titanium oxide and gold, all of which are used in the electronics industry. However, if it is to be used in bandages and medical tape, a key potential application, it will need to adhere to skin. The researchers have since tested other mussel-inspired synthetic proteins that have similar chemical groups and found that they are indeed adhesive to biological tissues. According to Phillip Messersmith, who led the team: “The challenge will be to scale up the technology and still have the geckel material exhibit adhesive behaviour”.<ref name=ex3/>
 
<!--*A typical fabrication process of synthetic setae is described as follows.
*#Design and optimize the length and diameter of carbon nanotubes, size of the pattern, stiffness of the backing tape and other important parameters for superior performance(in self-cleaning ability and shear resistance).
*#Photolithography is used to deposit catalyst in designed patterns on a SiO<sub>2</sub> wafer. The catalyst layer consists of a 10&nbsp;nm thick aluminum (Al), which acts as a buffer layer, and 1.5&nbsp;nm thick iron catalyst layer, which forms nanosize particles for catalytic growth of carbon nanotubes.
*#Micropatterned vertically aligned carbon nanotubes are grown on a silicon substrate with SiO2.
*#*Ethylene is used as a carbon source, and the reaction is carried out at 750 °C. An Ar/H2 gas mixture with a flow rate of 1300 standard cc per min is used as the buffer gas. Water vapor with a dew point of −20 °C is introduced in the reaction furnace by Ar/H2 flow during carbon nanotube growth. The growth time is 3 min, and the length of the carbon nanotubes is 100&nbsp;µm. The average diameter of the carbon nanotubes is 8&nbsp;nm (2–5 walls).
*#Flexible polymer tape with tacky coating on one side is pressed against the top surface of the carbon nanotubes. Upon peeling, the carbon nanotubes are transferred from the silicon substrate to the flexible polymer tape.
 
*Another experimental inroad to artificial setae is also provided by [[nanotube]]s. In one particular scheme, a thick layer of nanotubes is embedded in a polymer matrix and the adhesive force is calculated to be 200 times that provided by the gecko hairs. These multi walled nanotubes (MWNT) are generated by [[chemical vapour deposition]] with [[xylene]] as a carbon source and [[ferrocene]] as a [[catalyst]] and exposure of 10 minutes to 800 [[°C]] on a [[quartz]] or [[silicon]] substrate. The nanotubes have a diameter of 1 to 2 nanometres and a length of 65 micrometres. They are dipped into a solution of [[methyl methacrylate]] with [[azobisisobutylonitrile]] as a catalyst and [[1-decenethiol]] as a [[chain transfer agent]] and [[polymerization|polymerized]] to [[PMMA]] at 50 °C for 24 hours. The top is then etched away by immersion with a [[solvent]] like [[acetone]] exposing the MWNT hairs. In the final step the artificial skin and hairs are stripped from the silicon or quartz substrate.  [[Scanning probe microscopy]] provides a means to measure adhesive force.<ref>{{ cite web | title = Synthetic gecko foot-hairs from multiwalled carbon nanotubes | author = Betul Yurdumakan, Nachiket R. Raravikar, Pulickel M. Ajayan and Ali Dhinojwala | publisher = [[Chemical Communications]] | year = 2005 | edition = (30) | pages = 3799–3801 | url = http://www.rsc.org/Publishing/Journals/CC/article.asp?doi=b506047h }}</ref>-->
 
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:CMU mushroom fibres.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Mushroom-shaped polymer fibre array]] -->
 
===Commercial Production===
Automated, high-volume fabrication techniques will be necessary for these adhesives to be produced commercially and are being investigated by several research groups. A group led by Metin Sitti from Carnegie Mellon University is studying a range of different techniques which include deep reactive ion etching (DRIE), which has been used successfully to fabricate mushroom-shaped polymer fibre arrays(Figure on the right), micro-moulding processes, direct self-assembly and photolithography. In 2006, researchers at BAE Systems Advanced Technology Centre at Bristol, UK, announced that they had produced samples of “synthetic gecko” – arrays of mushroom-shaped hairs of polyimide – by photolithography, with diameters up to 100μm. These were shown to stick to almost any surface, including those covered in dirt, and a pull-off of 3,000&nbsp;kg/m^2 was measured. More recently, the company has used the same technique to create patterned silicon moulds to produce the material and has replaced the polyimide with polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS). This latest material exhibited a strength of 220 kPa. Photo-lithography has the benefit of being widely used, well understood and scalable up to very large areas cheaply and easily, which is not the case with some of the other methods used to fabricate prototype materials.
 
==Applications==
There has been a wide range of application of synthetic setae, also known as "gecko tape", ranging from nanotechnology and military uses to health care and sport.
 
===Robotics===
No machine yet exists that can maneuver in the “scansorial” regime – that is, perform nimbly in general vertical terrain environments without loss of competence in level ground operation.Two major research challenges face the development scansorial robotics. First, we seek to understand, characterize and implement the dynamics of climbing: wall reaction forces, limb trajectories, surface interactions, and so on. Second, we are designing, fabricating and deploying adhesive patch technologies that yield appropriate adhesion and friction properties to facilitate necessary surface interactions.
 
As progress continues in legged robotics, research has begun to focus on developing robust climbers. Various robots have been developed that climb flat vertical surfaces using suction, magnets, and arrays of small spines, to attach their feet to the surface.  
 
Here are some examples of crawler and climbing robots utilizing arrays of micro spines or claws.
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:RiSE platform on the brick.jpg|right|thumb|100px| RiSE on the brick]] -->
*RiSE Platform
 
the RiSE platform was developed in Biomimetics and Dexterous Manipulation Laboratory, Stanford University. It has twelve degrees of freedom (DOF), with six identical two DOF mechanisms spaced equally in pairs along the length of the body. Two actuators on each hip drive a four bar mechanism, which is converted to foot motion along a prescribed trajectory, and positions the plane of the four bar mechanism angularly with respect to the platform. For the RiSE robot to succeed in climbing in both natural and man-made environments it has proven necessary to use multiple adhesion mechanisms. The RiSE robot does not but will use dry adhesion in combination with spines.<ref>[https://webdisk.lclark.edu/autumn/reprints/05-AutumnRiSE-SPIE.pdf?ticket=t_O4UX69ZK Autumn, K., Buehler, M., Cutkosky, M., Fearing, R., Full, R. J., Goldman, D., Groff, R., Provancher, W., Rizzi, A. A., Saranli, U. et al. (2005). Robotics in scansorial environments. Proceedings of SPIE 5804, 291–302.]</ref>
 
More recently, robots have been developed that utilize synthetic adhesive materials for climbing smooth surfaces such as glass.
 
These crawler and climbing robots can be used in the military context to examine the surfaces of aircraft for defects and are starting to replace manual inspection methods. Today’s crawlers use vacuum pumps and heavy-duty suction pads which could be replaced by this material.
 
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:StickyBot Robot.jpg|right|thumb|100px| StickyBot]] -->
*Stickybot
Researchers at Stanford University have also created a robot called Stickybot which uses synthetic setae in order to scale even extremely smooth vertical surfaces just as a gecko would.<ref>[http://www.newscientisttech.com/channel/tech/mg19025526.500.html Gecko-like robot scampers up the wall – tech – 23 May 2006 – New Scientist Tech<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
<ref>[http://www.techtree.com/India/Future_Watch/Carbon_Nanotubes_Make_Superglue_Look_Silly/551-94007-505.html Carbon Nanotubes for gecko adhesive]</ref>
 
Stickybot is an embodiment of the hypotheses about the requirements for mobility on vertical surfaces using dry adhesion. The main point is that we need controllable adhesion. The essential ingredients are:
**hierarchical compliance for conforming at centimeter, millimeter and micrometer scales,
**anisotropic dry adhesive materials and structures so that we can control adhesion by controlling shear,
**distributed active force control that works with compliance and anisotropy to achieve stability.
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:Geckobot.jpg|right|thumb|100px| "Geckobot"]] -->
*Geckobot
Another similar example is "Geckobot" developed in Carnegie Mellon University,<ref>Murphy, Michael P.; Sitti, Metin, Geckobot: A gecko inspired climbing robot using elastomer adhesives, Collection of Technical Papers – InfoTech at Aerospace: Advancing Contemporary Aerospace Technologies and Their Integration, v 1, p 343-352, 2005</ref> which has climbed at angles of up to 60°, as shown in the figure.
 
===Nanotechnology/Joints replacement===
Adhesives based on synthetic setae have been proposed as a means of picking up, moving and aligning delicate parts such as ultra-miniature circuits, nano-fibres and nanoparticles, microsensors and micro-motors. In the macro-scale environment, they could be applied directly to the surface of a product and replace joints based on screws, rivets, conventional glues and interlocking tabs in manufactured goods. In this way, both assembly and disassembly processes would be simplified. It would also be beneficial to replace conventional adhesive with synthetic gecko adhesive(dry adhesive) in vacuum environment(e.g.in outerspace) since the liquid ingredient in conventional adhesive would easily evaporate and causes the connection to fail.{{citation needed|date=January 2012}}
 
===Other applications===
Other applications of synthetic setae have been proposed:{{citation needed|date=January 2012}}
*Fumble-free football gloves
*High-grip vehicle tires
*Training shoes and revolutionary rock climbing aids
*Spider-Man suits
 
==References==
{{Reflist|2}}
 
==External links==
*[http://legacy.lclark.edu/~autumn/dept/Welcome.html Prof. Kellar Autumn's '''Autumn Lab''' at Lewis & Clark College]
*[http://www.bostondynamics.com/content/sec.php?section=RiSE RiSE Project Web]
 
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2010}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Synthetic Setae}}
[[Category:Nanotechnology]]

Latest revision as of 05:29, 19 December 2014

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