Scientists at The Australian National University (ANU) have controlled wave-generated currents to make previously unimaginable liquid materials for new technological innovations, including techniques to manipulate micro-organisms.
The new kind of dynamic material could be revolutionary, similar to other materials created in recent decades that have been used for invisibility cloaking, superlenses and high-efficiency antennae.
Research group leader Professor Michael Shats from ANU said the currents made a liquid behave like materials with regular structures such as crystals.
“It’s an incredibly powerful new tool that will work at the surface of almost any liquid,” said Professor Shats from the ANU Research School of Physics and Engineering.
“By changing waves, we can change the flow patterns. This allows us to remote-control the nature of the material.”
The flow patterns can be changed at will, so the liquid-based materials are more dynamic and flexible than solid materials.
“These flow patterns are effectively two-dimensional materials at the interface between the liquid and the gas above it,” Professor Shats said.
The research is published in Nature Communications.
Lead author Dr Nicolas Francois from the ANU Research School of Physics and Engineering said each current was like a Lego brick.
“Now we have created the brick, people will be able to make complex structures we cannot imagine now,” he said.
“If you use conducting liquids you can create an interface with designed electrical properties. Or with biocompatible substances you can guide micro-organisms or trap them.”
The team observed the flow patterns in a tank of water by generating a wave pattern with two oscillators and tracking fluid particles. They also modelled the flow with computer simulations and theoretical calculations.
Learn more: ANU scientists make new high-tech liquid materials
[osd_subscribe categories=’controlled-wave-generated-currents’ placeholder=’Email Address’ button_text=’Subscribe Now for any new posts on the topic “CONTROLLED WAVE-GENERATED CURRENTS”‘]
Receive an email update when we add a new CONTROLLED WAVE-GENERATED CURRENTS article.
The Latest on: Controlled wave-generated currents
[google_news title=”” keyword=”controlled wave-generated currents” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]
via Google News
The Latest on: Controlled wave-generated currents
- Venezuelans head to the polls Sunday in election that could end autocratic socialist ruleon July 28, 2024 at 2:31 am
Venezuelans head to the polls on Sunday to choose a president, in what could be one of the most pivotal elections in the nation’s history that could put an end to more than a quarter-century of ...
- Wuthering Waves next banner and current banner schedule July 2024on July 24, 2024 at 5:00 pm
What is the current and next Wuthering Waves banner? Otherwise known as Convenes, Wuthering Waves banners run on a three-week rotation, which doesn’t give you much time to decide which ...
- Laser-excited acoustics provide contact-free, nondestructive composites inspectionon July 23, 2024 at 10:49 pm
Xarion’s couplant-free NDT technology uses laser physics and a membrane-free optical microphone, eliminating the requirement for fluid coupling.
- Scientists Say Saturn Moon's Liquid Lakes Have Waves and Currentson July 22, 2024 at 7:51 am
A new paper published in Nature Communications provides more insights into Titan's unusual bodies of water, including waves, currents, estuaries, and straits. This research utilises archived data ...
- Record heat and wildfire threat persisting out West over the weekendon July 20, 2024 at 5:39 pm
Over 30 million remain under heat alerts from Arizona up through Washington State, where widespread highs in the triple digits are expected.
- Lightning Talkson July 17, 2024 at 10:00 am
Take a deep dive into the flashiest secrets of this common but little understood natural phenomenon with leading researcher Steve Cummer.
- New Way To Control Spin Currents At Room Temperatureon July 12, 2024 at 5:00 pm
The broken inversion symmetry interface and the resulting electric field induce a Rashba-type spin–orbit field (SOF), which has been demonstrated to generate spin–orbit torque for data storage ...
- Offshore windfarms: A threat for electro-sensitive sharks?on July 4, 2024 at 5:00 pm
"Windfarms can induce noise, vibrations, interruptions to ecological continuity and generate ... under either control or windfarm-impacted conditions using AC or DC currents.
- 'Lethal situation': Scorching Calif. heat wave could have serious consequenceson July 3, 2024 at 5:00 pm
The current California heat wave is the worst the state has seen in nearly two decades, with the potential to last almost two weeks. But its length isn't the problem: The National Weather Service ...
via Bing News