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摩擦粘附:壁虎附着的新视角。

Frictional adhesion: A new angle on gecko attachment.

作者信息

Autumn K, Dittmore A, Santos D, Spenko M, Cutkosky M

机构信息

Department of Biology, Lewis & Clark College, 0615 SW Palatine Hill Road, Portland, OR 97219, USA.

出版信息

J Exp Biol. 2006 Sep;209(Pt 18):3569-79. doi: 10.1242/jeb.02486.

Abstract

Directional arrays of branched microscopic setae constitute a dry adhesive on the toes of pad-bearing geckos, nature's supreme climbers. Geckos are easily and rapidly able to detach their toes as they climb. There are two known mechanisms of detachment: (1) on the microscale, the seta detaches when the shaft reaches a critical angle with the substrate, and (2) on the macroscale, geckos hyperextend their toes, apparently peeling like tape. This raises the question of how geckos prevent detachment while inverted on the ceiling, where body weight should cause toes to peel and setal angles to increase. Geckos use opposing feet and toes while inverted, possibly to maintain shear forces that prevent detachment of setae or peeling of toes. If detachment occurs by macroscale peeling of toes, the peel angle should monotonically decrease with applied force. In contrast, if adhesive force is limited by microscale detachment of setae at a critical angle, the toe detachment angle should be independent of applied force. We tested the hypothesis that adhesion is increased by shear force in isolated setal arrays and live gecko toes. We also tested the corollary hypotheses that (1) adhesion in toes and arrays is limited as on the microscale by a critical angle, or (2) on the macroscale by adhesive strength as predicted for adhesive tapes. We found that adhesion depended directly on shear force, and was independent of detachment angle. Therefore we reject the hypothesis that gecko toes peel like tape. The linear relation between adhesion and shear force is consistent with a critical angle of release in live gecko toes and isolated setal arrays, and also with our prior observations of single setae. We introduced a new model, frictional adhesion, for gecko pad attachment and compared it to existing models of adhesive contacts. In an analysis of clinging stability of a gecko on an inclined plane each adhesive model predicted a different force control strategy. The frictional adhesion model provides an explanation for the very low detachment forces observed in climbing geckos that does not depend on toe peeling.

摘要

分支状微观刚毛的定向阵列构成了有脚垫的壁虎脚趾上的一种干粘合剂,壁虎是自然界中顶级的攀爬者。壁虎在攀爬时能够轻松且迅速地分离它们的脚趾。已知有两种分离机制:(1)在微观尺度上,当刚毛轴与基质达到临界角度时刚毛会分离;(2)在宏观尺度上,壁虎过度伸展它们的脚趾,显然像胶带一样剥离。这就引发了一个问题,即壁虎在倒挂在天花板上时是如何防止分离的,因为体重应该会导致脚趾剥离且刚毛角度增加。壁虎在倒挂时会使用相对的脚和脚趾,可能是为了维持防止刚毛分离或脚趾剥离的剪切力。如果分离是由脚趾的宏观剥离引起的,那么剥离角度应该随着施加的力单调减小。相反,如果粘附力是由刚毛在临界角度的微观分离所限制,那么脚趾分离角度应该与施加的力无关。我们测试了这样一个假设,即在孤立的刚毛阵列和活壁虎脚趾中,剪切力会增加粘附力。我们还测试了相关假设:(1)脚趾和阵列中的粘附力在微观尺度上像刚毛一样受临界角度限制,或者(2)在宏观尺度上像胶带预测的那样受粘附强度限制。我们发现粘附力直接取决于剪切力,并且与分离角度无关。因此我们拒绝壁虎脚趾像胶带一样剥离的假设。粘附力与剪切力之间的线性关系与活壁虎脚趾和孤立刚毛阵列中的临界释放角度一致,也与我们之前对单个刚毛的观察结果一致。我们为壁虎脚垫附着引入了一个新模型——摩擦粘附,并将其与现有的粘附接触模型进行了比较。在对壁虎在倾斜平面上的附着稳定性分析中,每个粘附模型都预测了不同的力控制策略。摩擦粘附模型为在攀爬的壁虎中观察到的极低分离力提供了一种不依赖于脚趾剥离的解释。

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