| Literature DB >> 22693563 |
Neil J Shirtcliffe1, Glen McHale, Michael I Newton.
Abstract
Creating surfaces capable of resisting liquid-mediated adhesion is extremely difficult due to the strong capillary forces that exist between surfaces. Land snails use this to adhere to and traverse across almost any type of solid surface of any orientation (horizontal, vertical or inverted), texture (smooth, rough or granular) or wetting property (hydrophilic or hydrophobic) via a layer of mucus. However, the wetting properties that enable snails to generate strong temporary attachment and the effectiveness of this adhesive locomotion on modern super-slippy superhydrophobic surfaces are unclear. Here we report that snail adhesion overcomes a wide range of these microscale and nanoscale topographically structured non-stick surfaces. For the one surface which we found to be snail resistant, we show that the effect is correlated with the wetting response of the surface to a weak surfactant. Our results elucidate some critical wetting factors for the design of anti-adhesive and bio-adhesion resistant surfaces.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22693563 PMCID: PMC3365046 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0036983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Snails cannot climb some surfaces.
a) Snails have attacked the lettuce on one of the pots, but not on the other, even after 12 h. The upper pot was coated with Hirec 1440 superhydrophobic paint and the lower pot with 1604 V superhydrophobic coating. Overlaid sequence of a snail moving on a track bounded by a snail resistant superhydrophobic paint: b) track mounted vertically, and c) track inclined at a low angle. The figure was produced by selecting and compositing frames where the snail had moved forward by around one shell length.d) Acceleration in units of gravitational acceleration, g = 9.81 ms−2, required to remove snails from various surfaces rotated in the horizontal plane. Only the Hirec 1440 required less acceleration than 1 g.
Figure 2Plot of receding contact angles of sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) solutions on different surfaces.