Litcius/Paper detail

The physical properties of the stick insect pad secretion are independent of body size

Domna-Maria Kaimaki, Charlotte N. S. Andrew, Andrea E. L. Attipoe, David Labonte

2022Journal of The Royal Society Interface11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Many insects use adhesive organs to climb. The ability to cling to surfaces is advantageous but is increasingly challenged as animals grow, due to the associated reduction in surface-to-volume ratio. Previous work has demonstrated that some climbing animals overcome this scaling problem by systematically altering the maximum force per area that their adhesive pads can sustain; their adhesive organs become more efficient as they grow, an observation which is also of substantial relevance for the design of bioinspired adhesives. What is the origin of this change in efficiency? In insects, adhesive contact is mediated by a thin film of a liquid, thought to increase adhesive performance via capillary and viscous forces. Here, we use interference reflection microscopy and dewetting experiments to measure the contact angle and dewetting speed of the secretion of pre-tarsal adhesive pads of Indian stick insects, varying in mass by over two orders of magnitude. Neither contact angle nor dewetting speed change significantly with body mass, suggesting that the key physical properties of the pad secretion-its surface tension and viscosity-are size-invariant. Thus, the observed change in pad efficiency is unlikely to arise from systematic changes of the physical properties of the pad secretion; the functional role of the secretion remains unclear.

Topics & Concepts

AdhesiveSurface tensionDewettingMaterials scienceClimbContact anglePenetration (warfare)NanotechnologyComposite materialContact areaViscosityBiophysicsBiomedical engineeringWettingBiologyMathematicsLayer (electronics)PhysicsMedicineQuantum mechanicsThermodynamicsOperations researchAdhesion, Friction, and Surface InteractionsInsect and Arachnid Ecology and BehaviorForce Microscopy Techniques and Applications