Department of Functional Morphology and Biomechanics, Zoological Institute, Kiel University, Am Botanischen Garten 9, D-24098 Kiel, Germany.
Department of Material Science and Engineering and the Russell Berrie Nanotechnology Institute, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, 32000 Haifa, Israel.
Beilstein J Nanotechnol. 2014 Jul 14;5:1031-41. doi: 10.3762/bjnano.5.116. eCollection 2014.
The impeding effect of plant surfaces covered with three-dimensional wax on attachment and locomotion of insects has been shown previously in numerous experimental studies. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of different parameters of crystalline wax coverage on insect attachment. We performed traction experiments with the beetle Coccinella septempunctata and pull-off force measurements with artificial adhesive systems (tacky polydimethylsiloxane semi-spheres) on bioinspired wax surfaces formed by four alkanes of varying chain lengths (C36H74, C40H82, C44H90, and C50H102). All these highly hydrophobic coatings were composed of crystals having similar morphologies but differing in size and distribution/density, and exhibited different surface roughness. The crystal size (length and thickness) decreased with an increase of the chain length of the alkanes that formed these surfaces, whereas the density of the wax coverage, as well as the surface roughness, showed an opposite relationship. Traction tests demonstrated a significant, up to 30 fold, reduction of insect attachment forces on the wax surfaces when compared with the reference glass sample. Attachment of the beetles to the wax substrates probably relied solely on the performance of adhesive pads. We found no influence of the wax coatings on the subsequent attachment ability of beetles. The obtained data are explained by the reduction of the real contact between the setal tips of the insect adhesive pads and the wax surfaces due to the micro- and nanoscopic roughness introduced by wax crystals. Experiments with polydimethylsiloxane semi-spheres showed much higher forces on wax samples when compared to insect attachment forces measured on these surfaces. We explain these results by the differences in material properties between polydimethylsiloxane probes and tenent setae of C. septempunctata beetles. Among wax surfaces, force experiments showed stronger insect attachment and higher pull-off forces of polydimethylsiloxane probes on wax surfaces having a higher density of wax coverage, created by smaller crystals.
先前的大量实验研究表明,植物表面的三维蜡状物会阻碍昆虫的附着和移动。本研究旨在研究不同晶状蜡覆盖参数对昆虫附着的影响。我们使用鞘翅目昆虫七星瓢虫(Coccinella septempunctata)进行了牵引实验,并使用人工粘附系统(粘性聚二甲基硅氧烷半球体)对受生物启发的蜡状表面进行了拉脱力测量,这些蜡状表面由四种不同链长的烷烃(C36H74、C40H82、C44H90 和 C50H102)形成。所有这些高度疏水的涂层均由具有相似形态但大小和分布/密度不同的晶体组成,并且表现出不同的表面粗糙度。晶体尺寸(长度和厚度)随形成这些表面的烷烃链长的增加而减小,而蜡覆盖的密度以及表面粗糙度则呈现相反的关系。与参考玻璃样品相比,牵引测试表明,昆虫在蜡状表面上的附着力显著降低了 30 倍。甲虫附着在蜡质基板上可能仅依赖于粘附垫的性能。我们发现蜡涂层对甲虫随后的附着能力没有影响。获得的数据解释了由于蜡晶体引入的微观和纳米级粗糙度,使得昆虫粘附垫的触须尖端与蜡质表面之间的实际接触减少。与在这些表面上测量的昆虫附着力相比,聚二甲基硅氧烷半球体的实验表明,在蜡样品上施加的力要高得多。我们将这些结果解释为聚二甲基硅氧烷探针和七星瓢虫(C. septempunctata)的触角之间的材料特性差异。在蜡质表面中,实验表明,具有更高蜡质覆盖密度的蜡质表面上,昆虫附着力更强,并且聚二甲基硅氧烷探针的拉脱力更高,而这些蜡质表面是由较小的晶体形成的。