Jonathan Wilker: What sticky sea creatures can teach us about making glue
Jonathan Wilker explores the science and engineering happening within our oceans. He works to understand the ways that sea creatures survive and how we can adapt their technologies to create new materials. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
on a field trip,
and take you all to the beach
and the salt spray.
we're getting knocked around by the waves,
to stay in place.
by all sorts of sea creatures
there in place, no problem.
that if you want to survive
upon your ability to make glue, actually.
to some of the heroes of our story,
they're covering the rocks.
to each other, actually.
together as a group.
of an oyster reef,
extensive reef systems.
they can be meters deep,
dominant influence
marine ecosystem is going to be,
is they're filtering the water constantly,
inside of these reefs.
what happens when a storm comes in,
first has to hit miles of these reefs,
is going to be protected.
pretty much anywhere in the world,
with what barnacles look like.
these are just three of them --
they stick to the rocks
and by doing this,
advantages they get.
is subjected to less of the turbulence
that can happen from that environment.
in numbers thing,
keep away the predators,
wants to pick you up and eat you,
if they're all stuck together.
with reproductive efficiency.
that when Mr. and Mrs. Barnacle decide,
little baby barnacles" --
how they do that just yet --
efficiency is higher
how they do this, how do they stick,
all the details,
we're still trying to figure out,
that we're trying to do.
systems we have in our lab,
is part of the system,
in the bottom, there's a bunch of mussels,
we have the lights cycled,
more adhesives for us
we collect it, we study it.
they're in Maine in February,
as far as we can tell.
of a small reef in South Carolina,
is seeing how they attach to each other,
in the bottom image
that are cementing to each other.
we'll cut them and look down,
of images we have here,
we'll have two shells,
and the shell of another animal,
in the shell of each animal,
actually looks different.
of fancy biology and chemistry tools
is the structures are different
and it's quite interesting.
before I tell you what this is.
"The Magic School Bus"?
"Fantastic Voyage," right?
they had these characters
to these microscopic levels,
all these biological structures?
except for it's real, in this case.
two oysters that are stuck together,
completely filled in with the cement,
has lots of different components in there,
there are hard, non-sticky parts
the non-sticky parts selectively
attaching the animals,
there's this sticky adhesive
and going back there.
we're doing to understand
is making these materials.
it's really exciting to learn.
to do with this information?
of technological applications
what the animals are doing.
or a mug or something like that?
of the hardware store.
cool people, because you're here,
and concerts --
that's on the shelf,
to put things back together,
in a bucket of water.
We all know this.
has solved this,
ways to be able to copy this ourselves.
the materials from the beach,
to do anything with,
ideally maybe train car scale.
of one of the types of molecules
to make their glue,
molecules, they're called proteins,
some fairly unique parts in them
those little parts of that chemistry,
into other long molecules that we can get
on a really large scale,
as plastics or polymers,
simplifying what they do,
into these large molecules.
adhesive systems in doing this,
a new adhesive that looks pretty good,
just sticking stuff together.
and glued together two pieces of metal
and thought we were very clever.
quantitative about this most often,
against commercial adhesives,
that are stronger than superglue.
It's stronger than superglue.
is one of our adhesive formulations,
we're dispensing it completely underwater,
an adhesive bond, or joint,
and just position it.
for a while, give it a chance,
on it, nothing fancy.
in it, nothing fancy.
It's completely underwater.
very strong underwater adhesion.
or at least one of the strongest
that's ever been seen.
that the animals produce,
It's pretty cool.
with these things?
that you're probably really familiar with.
your laptop, plywood in most structures,
phone books, things like this.
with the adhesives
or wood laminate in floors --
here is formaldehyde,
a lot of structures from these adhesives,
a lot of this carcinogen.
are all permanent.
or your car or even your laptop
when you're done using it?
they end up in landfills.
of precious materials in there
and recycle them.
together permanently.
to try and solve some of these problems,
is we've taken another long molecule
chemistry from the mussels.
and we've got the mussels,
it's also degradable,
under very mild conditions, with water.
is we can set things up
strongly when we want,
where a lot of us want to be.
this is a place we do not want to be,
if you've had some surgery or an injury.
look at how much you're making
as you pull things together.
It's not so good.
to hold together your bones,
you have to drill out
devised in a medieval torture chamber,
systems like these with adhesives.
but this is not easy.
for adhesives in these cases.
an adhesive that is going to set
little picture there,
are about 60 percent water,
I am a scientist and not an artist.
you need for a good biomedical adhesive:
in a material is pretty easy.
But getting all three hasn't been done.
they get picky --
on the same time frame as the surgery."
can remodel the site."
We're working on it.
all sorts of bones and skin
we'll whack it with a hammer.
in precise shapes.
some strong materials,
like they're not toxic,
we've solved the wet adhesion problem,
in our sights for the future.
to see things go farther down the road.
you can imagine we might be better off
fake nails or eyelash extensions,
they're going to be.
and get away from welding
of transportation.
comes back to the beach.
"How do these sea creatures stick?
really a lot of things we can still learn
you all to do in the future
laptops and cell phones
some of your own questions.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jonathan Wilker - Scientist, engineerJonathan Wilker explores the science and engineering happening within our oceans. He works to understand the ways that sea creatures survive and how we can adapt their technologies to create new materials.
Why you should listen
Jonathan Wilker is a professor of chemistry and materials engineering at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, US. Prior to arriving at Purdue in 1999, he received a bachelor's degree from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, a PhD at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and was a postdoctoral scholar at the California Institute of Technology. His research has been recognized with a Beckman Young Investigator Award, an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship and a National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award. His teaching has also received several awards at Purdue. He is always on the lookout for new projects when at the beach or while underwater scuba diving.
Jonathan Wilker | Speaker | TED.com