Monday, October 25, 2010

New Materials Inspired Spider Webs


New Materials Inspired by Water-Catching Properties of Spider Webs

Based on their research Lei Jiang and colleagues at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing created an artificial silk that mimics the water collecting abilities of natural webs. Whilst much is known about the strength of webs the scientists were keen to probe the lesser known ability of spider silk to capture and hold onto rain and morning dew – a mechanism that saves a spider from having to find a water source.

Using a powerful scanning electron microscope and a light microscope the team studied how the spider silk changes its structure when it becomes soaked in water vapour.
At the nanoscale dry spider silk resembles a necklace-like structure. It is formed from hydrophilic knots of silk connected by smooth and slender stretches known as joints. When water condenses on these knots they shrink into densely packed structures that are shaped like spindles. Moist droplets that hang from the spaces in between are drawn toward their nearest spindle-knot, where they gather in larger droplets. The difference in texture between the rough knots and the smooth joints aids the water movement.

Following this research Jiang’s team fabricated fibers that copied these properties. To do this artificial silks were formed by coating nylon fibers with poly(methylmethacrylate)/N,N-dimethylformamide-ethanol, which dries in tiny knots just like those in real spider silk. “Our artificial spider silk not only mimics the structure of wet-rebuilt spider silk but also its directional water collection capability,” the scientists claim.

The new material could be used to upgrade fog-catching nets such as those deployed in the coastal Andes that are providing people with water that they otherwise don't have access to. If the technology is commercialized it could be of great to benefit to communities living in rain-starved areas of the world.

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