“…Since the discovery of the role of van der Waals forces in biological dry adhesives such as those in insects and geckos in 2002 [2], there has been a surge of interest in developing techniques for fabricating synthetic biomimetic dry adhesive materials for various applications, including climbing robots [8][9][10][11], and medical/surgical applications [12]. Researchers are characterizing biological samples [3,13,14] and are fabricating synthetic adhesive arrays from polymers [15,16], carbon nanotubes [17,18], and organorods [19], using methods such as micro/nano-molding [16,[20][21][22][23][24][25], nano-embossing [26], carbon nanotube growth [17,18], fiber drawing [27], and lithography [15,28].…”