Copyright 2000 Guardian Newspapers
Limited
The Guardian (London)
June 8, 2000
SECTION: Guardian Science Pages, Pg. 1
LENGTH: 846 words
HEADLINE: Science: The sticking point: Henry Gee on the surprising secrets of one of nature's stickiest surfaces - the gecko's atom-powered feet
BYLINE: Henry Gee
BODY:
Robert Full's laboratory is more than
usually full of gizmos, even for a modern biologist. Full is a
biological engineer. Like an industrial espionage outfit, he and
colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley, look at
nature and try to reverse-engineer it - taking nature's solutions
to pieces, learning how they work then putting them together in
robot form, in new and exciting ways.
A big man with big enthusiasm, Full shows me a video of his team's
latest robot. This six-legged machine moves with all the natural
assurance of an insect; the cartoon face painted on the front
makes the creature (for that's what it is) look animated. It crosses
terrain that overturns other robots or stops them dead in their
(caterpillar) tracks. How does it do it? By doing what insects
do naturally: a bit of springiness engineered into the legs, combined
with mechanical responses at a local level (rather than always
being centralised through a "brain") make for a flexible,
robust system. Some feet, however, are the very opposite of springy;
they are sticky with a vengeance. Full's latest mission has been
to understand what makes the feet of geckos so adhesive. No hot
tropical night is complete without one of these small lizards
darting up walls and across ceilings.
For decades, scientists have studied this trick. The anatomy is
incredible. Each foot of a Tokay gecko (Gekko gecko) is clothed
with a fine pile of microscopic hairs, around 5,000 per square
millimetre - or around two million per gecko. These hairs have
split ends, each dividing into as many as 1,000 frayed strands
- the total, per lizard, running into billions.
As they show in today's Nature (June 8, 2000), Full and colleagues
have measured the force acting on isolated hairs as a gecko runs.
The hairs on the foot point backwards. As the gecko takes a step
and gains a purchase, the hairs are driven backwards and down,
engaging with the surface. The force on each hair is minuscule,
but the effect is cumulative: a totally stuck gecko would clamp
on to a surface with a force equivalent to 10 atmospheres of pressure.
No wonder they can stick to ceilings. But how does a gecko not
get bogged down?
The answer is that the gecko doesn't yank its feet off the surface
all at once, but peels off its toes at a certain angle, rather
like peeling off a strip of adhesive tape, or Velcro.
The puzzle is what makes them stick. Simple suction is out, because
gecko feet work perfectly, even in a vacuum.
Clinging to very fine cracks or imperfections is also out: geckos
can cope with polished glass.
It could be electrostatic attraction, like toy bal loons which,
when rubbed vigorously on your shirt or sweater, can be suspended
from a wall or ceiling.
But gecko feet work in ionised air, which would cancel out the
electrostatic effect. That leaves old-fashioned glue: except that
gecko feet have no suitable glue-secreting glands.
Back to square one, then - except that in the 1960s, a German
scientist, Uwe Hiller, wondered whether gecko feet might work
by tap-dancing their way into the molecular landscape of the surfaces
they crossed. Many molecules have a slight electrical polarisation.
Rather than being balanced throughout, they have spots of excess
negative or positive charge. These allow different molecules to
bind together very loosely, through a weak kind of electrostatic
interaction called the van der Waals force. Although very weak,
this force is highly important. It holds the strands of DNA together,
and some of the unusual properties of water - such as its high
boiling point - are connected to the fact that its molecules form
loose, ever-changing associations, bound by the van der Waals
force.
Uwe Hiller wondered if the fine hairs of gecko feet might exploit
van der Waals forces. Supporting evidence came from an unusual
finding: that geckos got stickier in proportion to the "free
energy" - the degree to which surfaces have loose molecular
ends - of the surfaces they crossed. Measurements by Full and
colleagues on single gecko foot hairs are consistent with this
idea: it sounds crazy, but geckos make their way by a kind of
atomic energy.
How to reverse-engineer gecko feet into something useful? Forget
Duck tape - Gecko tape could stick anything to anything else as
securely as molecular bonds would allow, yet peel off gently,
leaving no stain or trace. Sounds wonderful. Except that Full
and colleagues admit defeat, at least for now: human technology
is just too crude to manufacture structures as exquisitely tiny
and precise as gecko foot hairs.
But, they suggest, the very contemplation of such structures could
inspire those souls driven to create the perfect dry adhesive.
After all, stranger things have happened: legend has it that the
hooked burrs of plants inspired the invention of Velcro. And,
these days, we'd certainly come unstuck without that.
Henry Gee is a senior editor of Nature. His book, Deep Time: Cladistics,
the Revolution in Evolution, is published by Fourth Estate, price
pounds 20