Microstructured elastomeric surfaces with reversible adhesion and examples of their use in deterministic assembly by transfer printing
Silicon
Nanotubes, Carbon
Surface Properties
01 natural sciences
Elasticity
0104 chemical sciences
Nylons
Materials Testing
Animals
Printing
Dimethylpolysiloxanes
Stress, Mechanical
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.1005828107
Publication Date:
2010-09-22T02:28:10Z
AUTHORS (14)
ABSTRACT
Reversible control of adhesion is an important feature of many desired, existing, and potential systems, including climbing robots, medical tapes, and stamps for transfer printing. We present experimental and theoretical studies of pressure modulated adhesion between flat, stiff objects and elastomeric surfaces with sharp features of surface relief in optimized geometries. Here, the strength of nonspecific adhesion can be switched by more than three orders of magnitude, from strong to weak, in a reversible fashion. Implementing these concepts in advanced stamps for transfer printing enables versatile modes for deterministic assembly of solid materials in micro/nanostructured forms. Demonstrations in printed two- and three-dimensional collections of silicon platelets and membranes illustrate some capabilities. An unusual type of transistor that incorporates a printed gate electrode, an air gap dielectric, and an aligned array of single walled carbon nanotubes provides a device example.
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