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Discoblog
« This Is What a Near-Death Experience Looks Like
Funniest Science Headline of the Day: »

Gecko + Mussel = Geckel, One Fine Adhesive

spacing is important
In the rain, the Geico gecko
loses some adhesiveness.

Scientists have been trying to replicate the stickiness of a gecko’s foot for years, with varying success. Now researchers at Northwestern led by Phillip Messersmith have taken this to a whole ‘nother level by creating “geckel,” an adhesive that weds a gecko’s reversible stickiness with the mussel’s ability to remain effective when wet—an Achilles pseudopod for most adhesives. The researchers say geckel’s unique combination will make it a good water-resistant bandage or a suture that can work on wounds that refuse to stop bleeding.

The idea behind geckel is actually pretty straightforward: the researchers nanofabricated an array of tiny silicone fibers (geckos cling to walls using van der Waals forces in hair-like setae on their toes), and then smothered it with 3,4-L-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA), one of the proteins that gives mussels their binding power. They say geckel can be used through 1,000 “contact/release cycles”—Messersmith says other gecko biomimetics only work for two cycles—and performs equally well in dry or wet environments.

DiscoBlog will happily dedicate a blog post to any reader who covers a unitard with geckel and climbs the exterior of a tall building. Photographic evidence required.

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July 18th, 2007 10:30 AM by Amos Zeeberg (Discover Web Editor) in Technology Attacks!, The Wide (& Strange) World of Animals | 1 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

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      Discoblog is DISCOVER's compendium of quirky, funny, and surprising science news from the edge of the known universe. It's written by Veronique Greenwood and Valerie Ross. Email tips and suggestions to vgreenwood [at] discovermagazine [dot] com.

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