Popular Mechanics (South Africa)

A TRACK PAD ON YOUR ARM

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Whether you consider tattoos art, desecratio­n, or just a foolproof way to ensure that whatever relationsh­ip you’re memorialis­ing won’t last, there’s now another option: trackpad. This year, Cindy Hsin-liu Kao and a team of researcher­s from MIT Media Lab and Microsoft announced Duoskin, a conductive gold-leaf temporary tattoo with a power source and Bluetooth connectivi­ty. The tattoos recognise taps and swipes and can be used with most Bluetooth devices. No, you’re probably not going to want a calculator on your forearm. But an easy way to turn on the lights or control your music from across the room? The technology may bring us one step closer to becoming true cyborgs, but at least we’ll be popular at dinner parties.

gestion of magic. But it’s nothing like magic, Main says. “If you look at the toe of a gecko, it’s got millions and millions of tiny ‘hairs’. These little protrusion­s are very flexible and very, very strong. The gecko gets all of those hairs in close contact with the wall he’s climbing or the ceiling he’s hanging from and they all hold him up.” The phenomenon is based on a physics principle called Van der Waals forces, in which atoms in very close contact create a temporary attraction. So they understood how the sticking-to-the-wall part happened. Next they had to figure out the actual movement: to translate the mechanics of how the gecko dragged its upper and lower feet together to maintain the Van der Waals attraction, while also being able to move freely. Even when upside down.

Things got frustratin­g. Whatever the scientists learned, whatever new approaches they took, the results didn’t seem applicable to human use. “This programme would have been over in two years if we could have done exactly what the gecko does,” Main says. “But what the gecko does that humans can’t do is flex between two contact points all the time. People can’t get their hand on the wall and their foot on the wall and put a lot of force into sliding them towards each other.” Plus, there are all types of walls. What works on glass may not work on brick, which may not work on metal.

That frustratio­n was felt at Draper Labs in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts, too. Draper is a not-forprofit engineerin­g research and developmen­t organisati­on that does a lot of highly classified work for DARPA and other branches of the government. It’s staffed with brilliant scientists, most of whom have no idea what their colleagues are doing in the room next door. In one of those rooms, David Carter and Will Mcfarland had a minor breakthrou­gh. They had considered creating hand and foot paddles with a silicone “skin” made with nano-ridges, just like a gecko’s. But it still wouldn’t be strong enough to hold most people up on a wall. So they shifted their attention to another animal they’d been studying at the same time: spiders. In watching the insects climb brick, they discovered an ingenious array of fishhook spines, tightly assembled with the hooks facing downward. Those hooks grab into the brick face without slipping, as long as the spider’s – or the climber’s – body weight is suspended directly below them. Soon they developed hand paddles with tiny metal spines. And those paddles worked, allowing you to climb any wall, just as long as that wall was brick. This led researcher­s to experiment with steel and iron.

The obvious material was magnets and the two men created paddles that locked and unlocked from the wall by shifting a handle on the paddle up or down. Strap your legs in and you could climb any surface, just as long as it was metal. The uses were immediatel­y apparent. “There are a lot of steel structures like oil rigs that people needed safety and climbing equipment to manage,” Main says. The magnetic paddles have been licensed to a high-end military-supply company, Atlas Devices, and the technology is rumoured to be already in use by special-operations forces to climb on to ships, tankers and oil platforms.

So now scientists had a way to climb brick and a way to climb metal. But they had nothing for smooth, non-magnetic walls. At this point, Main had cycled out of DARPA, working for a startup for seven years and returned. When he got back, the mood was worse than when he’d left. Much worse. “There’s a required stage in every technology project,” Main says. “That’s the despair stage. That took place when we had been working on Z-man for quite some time but were in a rut. The idea of using suction came about because of frustratio­n at being in that rut.” Despair, in this case, was a good thing. “That’s when the creativity and drive kicks in and something terrific happens.”

The problem with the nano-ridged silicone skin Carter and Mcfarland had pictured before was that the surface couldn’t get close enough to the walls to activate the Van der Waals forces. They’d tried simple suction cups, too, but those could only hold climbers in place. There was no way to release and reaffix them to actually climb. Under Carter’s leadership, the team at Draper were inspired to combine the gecko skin and suction cups with leg power. Their new paddle consisted of synthetic gecko skin layered inside suction cups. To increase the efficiency of those suction cups, they attached foot stirrups to a series of pistons. When the foot stirrups are depressed, the pistons evacuate extra air inside the suction cups. This smashes the nano-ridges against the wall surface, activating the Van der Waals forces. And when the suction is released by lifting the climber’s weight off of the stirrup, the paddle can be easily moved elsewhere. Equally impressive is the cost: Carter and his team estimate that each pair will cost only R40 000 to R70 000.

Although it takes three types of paddles to conquer any surface instead of one, Main is confident that the technology will one day be combined into a single device. Like all military contractor­s, DARPA is cagey about if, where and how the Z-man has been deployed in the field. “Use your imaginatio­n” is all that Main will say. Which is probably the same advice he gave when he issued the Z-man challenge ten years ago. PM

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