Scientists Develop Super-Adhesive
Imagine a super-adhesive material that’s so strong, an index-card sized piece could hold more than 300 kilograms against a flat wall.
How do geckos do it?
For over a century, scientists around the world have tried to figure out how the tiny gecko, a lizard weighing barely 140 grams, can climb up a smooth vertical surface, or saunter nonchalantly across a ceiling, with a grip that would take a 4 kilogram bag of apples to break.
Developing a material that can mimic the adhesive strength of the gecko’s tiny footpads would be very desirable, and have almost unlimited commercial and military applications.