Viscous-poroelastic interaction as mechanism to create adhesion in frogs' toe pads
A. Tulchinsky, A. D. Gat

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel mechanism for frog toe pad adhesion based on viscous-poroelastic interaction, supported by experiments and modeling, explaining temporary underwater adhesion without capillary or van der Waals forces.
Contribution
It introduces a new model combining viscosity and elasticity to explain frog toe pad adhesion, supported by experimental and theoretical analysis.
Findings
Viscous-poroelastic interaction can create temporary adhesion.
The model explains underwater adhesion in torrent frogs.
Stress at the contact surface sustains adhesion temporarily.
Abstract
The toe pads of frogs consist of soft hexagonal structures and a viscous liquid contained between and within the hexagonal structures. It has been hypothesized that this configuration creates adhesion by allowing for long range capillary forces, or alternatively, by allowing for exit of the liquid and thus improving contact of the toe pad. In this work we suggest interaction between viscosity and elasticity as a mechanism to create temporary adhesion, even in the absence of capillary effects or van der Waals forces. We initially illustrate this concept experimentally by a simplified configuration consisting of two surfaces connected by a liquid bridge and elastic springs. We then utilize poroelastic mixture theory and model frog's toe pads as an elastic porous medium, immersed within a viscous liquid and pressed against a rigid rough surface. The flow between the surface and the toe pad…
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