首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>Journal of the Royal Society Interface >Biomechanics of shear-sensitive adhesion in climbing animals: peeling pre-tension and sliding-induced changes in interface strength
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Biomechanics of shear-sensitive adhesion in climbing animals: peeling pre-tension and sliding-induced changes in interface strength

机译:攀爬动物对剪切敏感的粘附的​​生物力学:剥离预拉伸和滑动引起的界面强度变化

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摘要

Many arthropods and small vertebrates use adhesive pads for climbing. These biological adhesives have to meet conflicting demands: attachment must be strong and reliable, yet detachment should be fast and effortless. Climbing animals can rapidly and reversibly control their pads' adhesive strength by shear forces, but the mechanisms underlying this coupling have remained unclear. Here, we show that adhesive forces of stick insect pads closely followed the predictions from tape peeling models when shear forces were small, but strongly exceeded them when shear forces were large, resulting in an approximately linear increase of adhesion with friction. Adhesion sharply increased at peel angles less than ca 30°, allowing a rapid switch between attachment and detachment. The departure from classic peeling theory coincided with the appearance of pad sliding, which dramatically increased the peel force via a combination of two mechanisms. First, partial sliding pre-stretched the pads, so that they were effectively stiffer upon detachment and peeled increasingly like inextensible tape. Second, pad sliding reduces the thickness of the fluid layer in the contact zone, thereby increasing the stress levels required for peeling. In combination, these effects can explain the coupling between adhesion and friction that is fundamental to adhesion control across all climbing animals. Our results highlight that control of adhesion is not solely achieved by direction-dependence and morphological anisotropy, suggesting promising new routes for the development of controllable bio-inspired adhesives.
机译:许多节肢动物和小型脊椎动物都使用粘合垫进行攀爬。这些生物粘合剂必须满足相互矛盾的要求:附着必须牢固可靠,而分离则要快速而轻松。攀爬的动物可以通过剪切力快速且可逆地控制其垫的粘合强度,但这种耦合的机制尚不清楚。在这里,我们表明,当剪切力较小时,昆虫垫的粘着力紧密遵循胶带剥离模型的预测,而在剪切力较大时,粘虫垫的粘着力会大大超过它们,从而导致粘着力随摩擦力呈线性增加。剥离角度小于约30°时,粘合力急剧增加,可以在连接和分离之间快速切换。与经典剥离理论的背离与垫块滑动的出现相吻合,通过两种机制的结合极大地增加了剥离力。首先,部分滑动会预拉伸衬垫,以使它们在拆卸时实际上更坚硬,并且像不可伸长的胶带一样逐渐剥离。第二,垫的滑动减小了接触区域中流体层的厚度,从而增加了剥离所需的应力水平。综合起来,这些效果可以解释粘附力和摩擦力之间的耦合,这是控制所有攀爬动物附着力的基础。我们的结果表明,粘附力的控制不仅是通过方向依赖性和形态各向异性来实现的,这表明可控的生物启发型胶粘剂的开发有希望的新途径。

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