Elasto-capillary windlass: from spider web to synthetic actuators

ORAL

Abstract

Spiders' threads display a wide range of materials properties. The glue-covered araneid capture silk is unique among all silks because it is self tensing and remains taut even if compressed, allowing both thread and web to be in a constant state of tension. Here we demonstrate how this effect is achieved by unraveling the physics allowing the nanolitre glue droplets straddling the silk thread to induce buckling, coiling and spooling of the core filaments. Our model examines this windlass activation as a structural phase transition, which shows that fibre spooling results from the interplay between elasticity and capillarity. Fibre size is the key as such a capillary windlass requires micrometer-sized fibres in order to function. Our synthetic capillary windlasses point towards design principles for new bioinspired synthetic actuators.

*The present work was supported by ANR grant ANR-09-JCJC-0022-01, ``La Ville de Paris - Programme Emergence,'' Royal Society International Exchanges Scheme 2013/R1 grant IE130506, and the PEPS PTI program from CNRS.

Authors

  • Herv\'e Elettro

    • Institut D'Alembert
  • Arnaud Antkowiak

    • Institut D'Alembert
  • S\'ebastien Neukirch

    • Institut D'Alembert
  • Fritz Vollrath

    • Oxford Silk Group