Robo-Gecko Climbs Glass 143
galactic_grub writes "Researchers at Stanford have developed a robot that mimics the extraordinary climbing skills of the Gecko. These creatures can climb sheer surfaces thanks to the intermolecular forces exerted by millions of tiny hairs their feet, called setae. The robot, Stickybot, has polymer pads on its feed with synthetic setae. Check out the video of it climbing up a sheet of glass."
Hrm.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Hrm.... (Score:1)
Ingenius application of the technology there.
Re:Hrm.... (Score:2)
Re:Hrm.... (Score:2)
Imagine what you could do with a small, camera enabled remote controlled gecko toy. Just make sure that it has an LED chameleon-like skin. Beyond the Big Brother considerations, you could mix the draw of voyeurism and the joy of being a total geek.
What more could any geek want?
The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:3, Informative)
A GECKO-like robot with sticky feet could soon be scampering up a wall near you. See a video of the robot in action here (24MB mov file). Geckos can climb up walls and across ceilings thanks to the millions of tiny hairs, or setae, on the surface of their feet. Each of these hairs is attracted to the wall by an intermolecular force called the van der Waals force, and this allows the gecko's feet to adhere. Stickybot, developed by Mark Cutkosky and his team at Stanford University in California, has feet with synthetic setae made of an elastomer. These tiny polymer pads ensure a large area of contact between the feet and the wall, maximising the van der Waals stickiness. The Pentagon is interested in developing gecko-inspired climbing gloves and shoes. Cutkosky says a Stickybot-type robot would also make an adept planetary rover or rescue bot. Frankly, I cant believe this tech couldnt have been done already, even twenty or thirty years ago. I have to imagine we've had the tech to do adhesiveness on demand based on an external stimuli ( such as electricity ) for many years. We have had the ability when the opposite material is metal since atleast the beginning of the space race, but even sticking to any surface on demand shouldnt be too difficult.
My question is, does the armies interest stem from creating an army of spidermen?
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:1)
The military and intelligence applications for robots like these could be immense. No doubt there would be a huge invasion of privacy outrage if people knew these robots were being used for spying of some sorts.
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:2)
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:2)
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:2)
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:2)
Pick #1 (Score:2)
Moving, as you no doubt noticed, requires that the pads be peeled backwards. Thousands of microscopic spikes provide tremendous traction, but it isn't going to impact tyres that much (yet). Perhaps climbing apparatus will see this material soon.
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:4, Funny)
I agree. I don't understand what's involved to make this possible, ego, it must be easy!
Build me one of them search engine thingies. We'll go up against Google!
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:1)
Re: The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:3, Insightful)
They also mention the rescue bot - that sounds like a great application for a collapsed building.
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:1)
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:2, Informative)
A common misconception about glass (Score:5, Interesting)
Someone will probably bring up the old glass windows with thick bits at the bottom as an incorrect example of glass flowing (creeping) over time at room temperature. Consider - if you are a very clever person building a Cathedral with very large heavy glass windows of varying cross section, which end would you put at the bottom? The float glass method we use today was not around centuries ago, so builders did not have the nice panes of glass we have today.
The disordered glassy state is also possible in metals and can have some advantages - for instance in an iron based glass the magnetic properties are very good and the strength is high. These materials are made with the right mixture of elements and a very rapid cooling rate (molten to solid in milliseconds) and are not stable at room temperature - but are called "metastable" because it will take centuries at room temperature to diffuse into the stable crystalline structure.
One last thing - crystalline solids like lead alloys flow too with a high enough temperature and stress - like big lead organ pipes hundreds of years old or high pressure steam tubing over a few years. You don't need the glassy structure for creep to occur.
Re:A common misconception about glass (Score:3, Funny)
The thin end of course! This way, when glass inevitably will start flowing, it will have the effect of "evening out" the uneven thickness, rather than accentuating it further.
Re:A common misconception about glass (Score:2)
True professionals prefer aluminium though...
Re:A common misconception about glass (Score:2)
Yes, you heard it first from slashdot that Glass is Soquid!
Amorphous Steel (Score:2)
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:2, Informative)
I would like to point your attention to this article:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass#Glass_as_a_liq
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:2)
I know I should question everything I am taught - but if I were to question every single thing I was taught as a younster I'd need to live to 150 years old.
So I guess I'll go ahead assuming that 2+2=4, but when my kid comes home and tell me that glass is a liquid, I'm gonna have to have a sit down
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:2)
2+2=4 is only valid for sufficiently low values of 2.
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:1)
I doubt the Army is interested in wall-climbing robots to make SpiderMen. More likely, they want man-portable devices that can climb up walls with sensors (for detection/observation), thin lead lines and anchors (to anchor a climbing rope that humans with packs can then climb), and so that they can scale up to hard-to-reach observation posts with remote-controlled sniper rifles.
Or maybe they just want us to think they actually
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:2)
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:1)
Still, wouldn't you rather it was a robot gecko climbing up there first, rather than a person? Especially if it slips or falls or is shot down
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:2, Interesting)
But I am both
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:3, Insightful)
The big problem with gecko gloves or any other application of this principle is keeping them clean. T
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:1)
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:2)
I don't know for sure, but one option that biological geckos have that robots don't is that they can let the pads wear out and grow back, continually renewing the surface.
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:2)
Re:The Article. Shocked this is new (Score:5, Interesting)
http://physicsweb.org/articles/news/7/6/4/1 [physicsweb.org] has details and pictures of the progress as of 2003; the material worked in the short term, but got clogged with dirt as you mentioned... and the setae stuck to themselves, as can be seen in the second picture there.
Actually, this isn't new. It's been done before (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2002/0 9/rfull/robots.html [berkeley.edu]
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/ar [sfgate.com]
A new weapon? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:A new weapon? (Score:1)
Obligatory (Score:4, Funny)
Seriously though, FTA "The Pentagon is interested in developing gecko-inspired climbing gloves and shoes." I want some of those, these if ever actually created (not sure what issues here would be but I assume mass, surface area and gravity would play in there somewhere) would have a huge impact on normal life. Just imagine the benefits to burglars, the next invention is going to have to be some very very slippery paint
Re:Obligatory (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Obligatory (Score:1)
As a point, if the paint was in millions of thin layers (somehow), wouldn't the first layer be pulled off when anything exerting a strong enough force interacted with it, like wind or water on it surface?
Re:Obligatory (Score:2, Interesting)
Basically a dry foam covering on the wall which could leave prints from whatever tries to climb it.
Because the surface will be fragile there would be nothing to get a grip on so it would fall, its like us trying to climb a sand-dune.
You could even get a spray on compound and touchup bits which get disturbed.
Re:Obligatory (Score:4, Funny)
Otherwise it wouldn't be much fun.
Re:Obligatory (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Obligatory (Score:5, Informative)
Already invented... you're looking for Fluoroplastic Paint [daikin.co.jp].
Re:Obligatory (Score:1)
Re:Obligatory (Score:3, Informative)
Chemically, Teflon is polytetrafluoroethylene or PTFE, a carbon chain with flourine occupying all other bonding (polyethylene, one of the simplest synthetic polymers, is a carbon chain with hydrogens). The carbon-fluorine bond is particularly strong, resulting in the non-stick properties. I'd assume the chemical properties of Fluorplastic paint to be similar to those of PTFE. I recently read a newspaper article that gave light descriptions of how PTFE was bonded to various types of cooking ware (can't remem
Re:Obligatory (Score:2)
I always thought it was done using lots of tiny Geckoes...
But! (Score:1)
Re:Obligatory (Score:1, Funny)
At last I'll have something to go with my spider man underpants.
Re:Obligatory (Score:2)
Flat things do it too (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Flat things do it too (Score:2)
Re:Flat things do it too (Score:2)
Re:Flat things do it too (Score:2)
Re:Flat things do it too (Score:1, Interesting)
Hmmm... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2)
She would
Utility gecko (Score:5, Funny)
Mirrors, anyone?
-- n
I know that smell - (Score:2)
Re:Utility gecko (Score:2)
Here ya go. [whatsmykarma.com]
Re:Utility gecko (Score:2)
video url (Score:5, Informative)
here's the video URL:
http://bdml.stanford.edu/twiki/pub/Main/StickyBot
Re:video url (Score:1)
Re:video url (Score:2)
Re:video url (Score:1)
Re:video url (Score:2)
Speed (Score:4, Interesting)
Otherwise it was kinda cool.
Re:Speed (Score:2)
anything new? (Score:2)
Last of heard of this technique it had a problem in that it gets dirty VERY quickly and starts losing its sticky
Having to hire a window washing crew everytime i want to play spiderman downtown gets too expensive and really slows down those rescues
In other news.... (Score:5, Funny)
University officials were unavailable for comment.
cool but not cool enough (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:cool but not cool enough (Score:2)
I would also like to point out that the trend has been for the military to get tools that are more effictive at getting a precise target. Which means fewer people killed on both sides.
The important question (Score:2)
Doomed (Score:2, Funny)
Why, after seeing the mention of "Government" in that article, does that name look like Mark Cut Cost"-ky ?
Bad Plan, what are they thinking? (Score:5, Funny)
There was the one about the Japanese chick robot followed by the similar South Korean model, then a little farther back we have our artificial "muscle".
Combine those with the story a year or so back about the robots that power themselves by digesting organic matter and frankly all my best nightmares start out on Slashdot. I'll probably be in my 60's when the sexy Japanese carnivorous wall climbing robots with super strength come to get me.
Others are aware of the conspiracy... (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.theregister.co.uk/science/rotm/ [theregister.co.uk]
A very amusing read...
Re:Bad Plan, what are they thinking? (Score:2)
It'll take them only 10 minutes to walk in through the open windows and another 20 to walk to the sofa where you sit in terror awaiting your destiny.
But if you decide to go to the bathroom, the robot is pretty much screwed, his battery won't last as long to hunt you that far.
Power of the Gecko (Score:5, Funny)
I don't see that showing up in IE7! Hah!
Re:Power of the Gecko (Score:3, Funny)
Not only that, but it could save you 15% or more on your auto insurance!
All you need... (Score:3, Funny)
Yes but... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Yes but... (Score:1)
Gecko!! (Score:1)
You're nicked! (Score:2, Funny)
My question... (Score:2)
Re:like this.... (Score:2)
I bet the gecko cost more than $8.75 too!
Carnegie Mellon nanorobotics (Score:1)
dusty, sticky feet (Score:3, Interesting)
Late April fools? (Score:2, Informative)
Although i think this is a cool bot in itself, I never trust anything released on April 1st
The Amazing Geckoman (Score:1)
This works even better than the article says (Score:5, Informative)
Here's the web site for the project. [stanford.edu]
They have a new and powerful fabrication technique, too. They use a stereolithography machine to make their parts, but they use it in an unusual way. They use a machine that's intended to make multicolored objects from several different colored materials, and load it up with materials with different physical and electrical properties. So they can make a one-piece 3D part with soft parts and hard parts, or insulating parts and conductive parts. This is the beginning of a whole new kind of fabrication, which is what Cutkowsky is really into.
At Home Version (Score:3, Funny)
I, for one, can't wait for the "at home" version.
Finally... (Score:3, Funny)
It really uses... (Score:1)
Oh the money spent... (Score:2)
Nice picture. (Score:2)
Gecko self-cleaning properties (Score:2)
(from the article I linked: "Contact mechanical models suggest t
Re:my $0.02 (CDN) (BAD MODS) (Score:5, Funny)
Didn't even bother to read the article, eh, my Candian friend?
"Each of these hairs is attracted to the wall by an intermolecular force called the van der Waals force, and this allows the gecko's feet to adhere."
It's not your comment that pisses me off, it's the fact that it got moderated up... BAD MODS! NO COOKIE!
Re:my $0.02 (CDN) (BAD MODS) (Score:2)
i said that i remember reading about something similar. i didn't say that it was the exact same thing.