Interfacial propulsion by directional adhesion |
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Authors: | Manu Prakash John WM Bush |
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Institution: | a Junior Fellow, Harvard Society of Fellows, Harvard University, United States b Department of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United States |
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Abstract: | The rough integument of water-walking arthropods is well-known to be responsible for their water-repellency 1], 2], 3] and 4]; however, water-repellent surfaces generally experience reduced traction at an air-water interface 5], 6], 7] and 8]. A conundrum then arises as to how such creatures generate significant propulsive forces while retaining their water-repellency. We here demonstrate through a series of experiments that they do so by virtue of the detailed form of their integument; specifically, their tilted, flexible hairs interact with the free surface to generate directionally anisotropic adhesive forces that facilitate locomotion. We thus provide new rationale for the fundamental topological difference in the roughness on plants and water-walking arthropods, and suggest new directions for the design and fabrication of unidirectional superhydrophobic surfaces. |
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Keywords: | Unidirectional superhydrophobic surfaces Propulsion on interfaces Water strider Force spectroscopy on a fluid interface |
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