Rheological fingerprinting of gastropod pedal mucus and synthetic complex fluids for biomimicking adhesive locomotion†
Abstract
Nonlinear rheological properties are often relevant in understanding the response of a material to its intended environment. For example, many gastropods crawl on a thin layer of pedal mucus using a technique called adhesive locomotion, in which the gel structure is periodically ruptured and reformed. We present a mechanical model that captures the key features of this process and suggests that the most important properties for optimal inclined locomotion are a large, reversible yield stress, followed by a small shear viscosity and a short thixotropic restructuring time. We present detailed rheological measurements of native pedal mucus in both the linear and nonlinear viscoelastic regimes and compare this “rheological fingerprint” with corresponding observations of two bioinspired slime simulants, a