November 22, 2024
Hossein Eslami

Hossein Eslami

Academic Rank: Professor
Address:
Degree: Ph.D in Chemistry
Phone: 09100000000
Faculty: Faculty of Nano and Biotechnology

Research

Title Understanding Humidity-Enhanced Adhesion of Geckos: Deep Neural Network-Assisted Multi-Scale Molecular Modeling
Type Article
Keywords
gecko keratin
Journal Small
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/smll.202206085
Researchers Tobias Materzok (First researcher) , Hossein Eslami (Second researcher) , Stanislav Gorb (Third researcher) , Florian Müller-Plathe (Fourth researcher)

Abstract

A higher relative humidity leads to an increased sticking power of gecko feet to surfaces. The molecular mechanism responsible for this increase, however, is not clear. Capillary forces, water mediating keratin-surface contacts and water- induced softening of the keratin are proposed as candidates. In previous work, strong evidence for water mediation is found but indirect effects via increased flexibility are not completely ruled out. This article studies the latter hypothesis by a bottom-up coarse-grained mesoscale model of an entire gecko spatula designed without explicit water particles, so that capillary action and water- mediation are excluded. The elasticity of this model is adjusted with a deep neural network to atomistic elastic constants, including water at different con- centrations. Our results show clearly that on nanoscopic flat surfaces, the sof- tening of keratin by water uptake cannot nearly account for the experimentally observed increase in gecko sticking power. Here, the dominant mechanism is the mediation of keratin-surface contacts by intervening water molecules. This mechanism remains important on nanostructured surfaces. Here, however, a water-induced increase of the keratin flexibility may enable the spatula to follow surface features smaller than itself and thereby increase the number of contacts with the surface. This leads to an appreciable but not dominant contribution to the humidity-increased adhesion. Recently, by atomistic grand- canonical molecular dynamics simulation, the room-temperature isotherm is obtained for the sorption of water into gecko keratin, to the authors’ knowl- edge, the first such relation for any beta-keratin. In this work, it relates the equilibrium water content of the keratin to the ambient relative humidity.