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Twinkle toes: how geckos' sticky feet stay clean.


So strong is the stickiness of some geckos' feet that the lizards can hang from a ceiling by a single toe. Despite that dinginess, the forest of adhesive fibers on the underside of each toe stays nearly dirtfree without grooming or washing.

Now, researchers say they've figured out the secret. Moreover, because dirt typically weakens adhesive bonds, the findings could inspire improved surface-attachment schemes for mountain climbers and robots.

In the new study, Wendy R. Hansen and Kellar Autumn coated the feet of live Tokay geckos with ceramic microspheres. This mock dirt counteracted the weak van der Waals forces van der Waals forces: see intermolecular forces.
van der Waals forces

Relatively weak electrical forces that attract neutral (uncharged) molecules to each other in gases, liquefied and solidified gases, and almost all organic liquids and solids.
 that usually sum into a lizard's tenacious grip on surfaces.

Using glass as a model surface, the researchers determined the foot-glass attraction as the lizards took a series of steps. With each step, the grip became stronger, indicating that microspheres were being shed.

In other tests, the researchers simulated steps using arrays of foot fibers removed from gecko gecko (gĕk`ō), small or medium-sized lizard of the family Gekkonidae. The more than 300 species are distributed throughout the warm regions of the world, mostly in the Old World. Despite folklore to the contrary, their bite is not poisonous.  toes and dusted with the microspheres. These trials also showed that gecko feet are "self-cleaning" Hansen, now at the University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley is a public research university located in Berkeley, California, United States. Commonly referred to as UC Berkeley, Berkeley and Cal , and Autumn of Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Ore., report in the Jan. 11 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. .

To find out how gecko feet clean themselves, the team considered the van der Waals forces that a surface, such as a wall, exerts on a microsphere Not to be confused with Glass microphere.
This article largely refers to micropheres or protein protocells as small spherical units postulated by some scientists as a key stage in the origin of life.
. They then compared that attraction with the hold on the particle by toe fibers. Using simplified geometric models that represent the ends of the fibers as shallow cups or flexible strips, the scientists calculated that from 26 to 59 of the fibers would have to cling to each microsphere to keep it from sticking to the wall as the gecko steps away.

Yet in most cases, "when you look under an electron microscope electron microscope: see microscope. , you don't observe that many [fibers] actually attached to a single dirt particle," Autumn notes. Hence, when the fibers and the surface compete for a dirt particle, the surface usually wins.

This new work is "potentially important for a fundamental understanding of adhesion processes and for biomimetic mechanical systems;' such as walking robots, comments Jacob N. Israelachvili of the University of California, Santa Barbara History
The predecessor to UCSB, Santa Barbara State College, focused on teacher training, industrial arts, home economics, and foreign languages. Intense lobbying by an interest group in the City of Santa Barbara led by Thomas Storke and Pearl Chase persuaded the State
.

However, this picture of competition for dirt between surface and fiber forces is probably incomplete, others caution. Manoj K. Chaudhury of Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa., for instance, urges a reexamination re·ex·am·ine also re-ex·am·ine  
tr.v. re·ex·am·ined, re·ex·am·in·ing, re·ex·am·ines
1. To examine again or anew; review.

2. Law To question (a witness) again after cross-examination.
 of the proposed mechanism of self-cleaning using more-sophisticated models of the forces and geometries involved.

Gecko feet have already inspired new adhesives (SN: 6/7/03, p. 356), Autumn notes. If they can self-clean, such adhesives might even prove useful in rock climbing or for making geckolike Mars rovers, he adds.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Weiss, P.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 8, 2005
Words:447
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