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Getting a grip on spider attachment: an AFM approach to microstructure adhesion in arthropods

Antonia B Kesel et al 2004 Smart Mater. Struct. 13 512-518   doi: 10.1088/0964-1726/13/3/009  Help

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Antonia B Kesel1,3, Andrew Martin1 and Tobias Seidl2
1 University of Applied Sciences, Institute for Technical Zoology and Bionics, D-28199 Bremen, Germany
2 University of Zurich, Institute for Zoology, Department of Neurobiology, CH-8057 Zurich, Switzerland
3 Author to whom any correspondence should be addressed
E-mail: akesel@bionik.hs-bremen.de

Abstract. Although the spider exoskeleton, like those of all other arthropods (spiders, insects and crustaceans), consists of an extremely non-adhesive material known as cuticle, some spider species produce astonishingly high adhesive forces using cuticular appendages. Unlike other arthropods, they do not rely on sticky fluids but use a different strategy: the miniaturization and multiplication of contact elements. In this study the number of contact elements (setules) in the species Evarcha arcuata was determined at 624 000 with an average contact area of 1.7 × 105 nm2. The total area of contact in this species measured 1.06 × 1011 nm2. By using atomic force microscopy it was shown that a single setule can produce an adhesive force of 41 nN perpendicular to a surface. Thus with a total adhesive force Fa = 2.56 × 10−2 N and an average body mass of 15.1 mg, this species possesses a safety factor (adhesive force Fa/force for weight Fm) of 173. The tenacity σ (ultimate tensile strength) amounts to 0.24 MPa. Due to the extreme miniaturization of the contact elements it is assumed that van der Waals forces are the underlying adhesive forces, although final evidence for this has yet to be provided. The present study was performed in order to clarify the fundamental basics of a biological attachment system and to supply potential input for the development of novel technical devices.

Print publication: Issue 3 (June 2004)
Received 25 June 2003, in final form 12 January 2004
Published 19 April 2004

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