PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New material structures bend like microscopic hair

Researchers say structures may be used in windows to wick away moisture

2014-08-06
(Press-News.org) CAMBRIDGE, MA -- MIT engineers have fabricated a new elastic material coated with microscopic, hairlike structures that tilt in response to a magnetic field. Depending on the field's orientation, the microhairs can tilt to form a path through which fluid can flow; the material can even direct water upward, against gravity.

Each microhair, made of nickel, is about 70 microns high and 25 microns wide — about one-fourth the diameter of a human hair. The researchers fabricated an array of the microhairs onto an elastic, transparent layer of silicone.

In experiments, the magnetically activated material directed not just the flow of fluid, but also light — much as window blinds tilt to filter the sun. Researchers say the work could lead to waterproofing and anti-glare applications, such as "smart windows" for buildings and cars.

"You could coat this on your car windshield to manipulate rain or sunlight," says Yangying Zhu, a graduate student in MIT's Department of Mechanical Engineering. "So you could filter how much solar radiation you want coming in, and also shed raindrops. This is an opportunity for the future."

In the near term, the material could also be embedded in lab-on-a-chip devices to magnetically direct the flow of cells and other biological material through a diagnostic chip's microchannels.

Zhu reports the details of the material this month in the journal Advanced Materials. The paper's co-authors are Evelyn Wang, an associate professor of mechanical engineering, former graduate student Rong Xiao, and postdoc Dion Antao.

Nature's dynamics

The inspiration for the microhair array comes partly from nature, Zhu says. For example, human nasal passages are lined with cilia — small hairs that sway back and forth to remove dust and other foreign particles. Zhu sought to engineer a dynamic, responsive material that mimics the motion of cilia.

"We see these dynamic structures a lot in nature," Zhu says. "So we thought, 'What if we could engineer microstructures, and make them dynamic?' This would expand the functionality of surfaces."

Zhu chose to work with materials that move in response to a magnetic field. Others have designed such magnetically actuated materials by infusing polymers with magnetic particles. However, Wang says it's difficult to control the distribution — and therefore the movement — of particles through a polymer.

Instead, she and Zhu chose to manufacture an array of microscopic pillars that uniformly tilt in response to a magnetic field. To do so, they first created molds, which they electroplated with nickel. They then stripped the molds away, and bonded the nickel pillars to a soft, transparent layer of silicone. The researchers exposed the material to an external magnetic field, placing it between two large magnets, and found they were able to control the angle and direction of the pillars, which tilted toward the angle of the magnetic field.

"We can apply the field in any direction, and the pillars will follow the field, in real time," Zhu says.

Tilting toward a field

In experiments, the team piped a water solution through a syringe and onto the microhair array. Under a magnetic field, the liquid only flowed in the direction in which the pillars tilted, while being highly "pinned," or fixed, in all other directions — an effect that was even seen when the researchers stood the array against a wall: Through a combination of surface tension and tilting pillars, water climbed up the array, following the direction of the pillars.

Since the material's underlying silicone layer is transparent, the group also explored the array's effect on light. Zhu shone a laser through the material while tilting the pillars at various angles, and found she could control how much light passed through, based on the angle at which the pillars bent.

In principle, she says, more complex magnetic fields could be designed to create intricate tilting patterns throughout an array. Such patterns may be useful in directing cells through a microchip's channels, or wicking moisture from a windshield. Since the material is flexible, Wang says that it may even be woven into fabric to create rain-resistant clothing.

"A nice thing about this substrate is that you can attach it to something with interesting contours," Wang says. "Or, depending on how you design the magnetic field, you could get the pillars to close in like a flower. You could do a lot of things with the same platform."

INFORMATION: This research was supported by funding from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research.

Written by Jennifer Chu, MIT News Office


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Coping skills help women overcome the mental anguish of unwanted body evaluation and sexual advances

2014-08-06
Some young women simply have more resilience and better coping skills and can shrug off the effect of unwanted cat calls, demeaning looks and sexual advances. Women with low resilience struggle and could develop psychological problems when they internalize such behavior, because they think they are to blame. So say Dawn Szymanski and Chandra Feltman of the University of Tennessee in the US, in Springer's journal Sex Roles, after studying how female college students handle the sexually objectifying behavior of men. According to the popular feminist Objectification Theory, ...

Curing arthritis in mice

2014-08-06
Rheumatoid arthritis is a condition that causes painful inflammation of several joints in the body. The joint capsule becomes swollen, and the disease can also destroy cartilage and bone as it progresses. Rheumatoid arthritis affects 0.5% to 1% of the world's population. Up to this point, doctors have used various drugs to slow or stop the progression of the disease. But now, ETH Zurich researchers have developed a therapy that takes the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis in mice to a new level: after receiving the medication, researchers consider the animals to be fully ...

Job insecurity in academia harms the mental wellbeing of non-tenure track faculty

2014-08-06
Non-tenure-track academics experience stress, anxiety, and depression due to their insecure job situation, according to the first survey of its kind published in the open-access journal Frontiers in Psychology. There were 1.4 contingent faculty workers in the USA, according to a report by the American Association of University Professors. These faculty members, such as research adjunct faculty, lecturers and instructors, are off the so-called "tenure track". They work under short-term contracts with limited health and retirement benefits, often part-time and at different ...

Preparing for a changing climate: Ecologists unwrap the science in the National Climate Change Assessment

2014-08-06
Two Ignite sessions focusing on findings in the United States National Climate Assesment5 (NCA) will take place on Monday, August 11th during the Ecological Society of America's 99th Annual Meeting, held this year in Sacramento, California. The first session, Ignite 1: From Plains to Oceans to Islands: Regional Findings from the Third National Climate Assessment will highlight major findings from the report about the regional effects of climate change, discuss impacts to the ecosystems of the region, and explore how changes in those ecosystems can moderate or exacerbate ...

Triangulum galaxy snapped by VST

2014-08-06
Messier 33, otherwise known as NGC 598, is located about three million light-years away in the small northern constellation of Triangulum (The Triangle). Often known as the Triangulum Galaxy it was observed by the French comet hunter Charles Messier in August 1764, who listed it as number 33 in his famous list of prominent nebulae and star clusters. However, he was not the first to record the spiral galaxy; it was probably first documented by the Sicilian astronomer Giovanni Battista Hodierna around 100 years earlier. Although the Triangulum Galaxy lies in the northern ...

Study: Many cancer survivors smoke years after diagnosis

2014-08-06
ATLANTA – August 6, 2014–Nearly one in ten cancer survivors reports smoking many years after a diagnosis, according to a new study by American Cancer Society researchers. Further, among ten cancer sites included in the analysis, the highest rates of smoking were in bladder and lung cancers, two sites strongly associated with smoking. The study appears early online in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention. Cigarette smoking decreases the effectiveness of cancer treatments, increases the probability of recurrence, and reduces survival time. Nonetheless, some studies ...

Nearly 10 percent of patients with cancer still smoke

Nearly 10 percent of patients with cancer still smoke
2014-08-06
PHILADELPHIA — Nine years after diagnosis, 9.3 percent of U.S. cancer survivors were current smokers and 83 percent of these individuals were daily smokers who averaged 14.7 cigarettes per day, according to a report in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR). "We need to follow up with cancer survivors long after their diagnoses to see whether they are still smoking and offer appropriate counseling, interventions, and possible medications to help them quit," said Lee Westmaas, PhD, director of tobacco ...

Healthy diet set early in life

2014-08-06
Promoting a healthy diet from infancy is important to prevent childhood obesity and the onset of chronic disease. This is the finding from a study published in the latest issue of Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health. Led by Rebecca Byrne from QUT, the study described quantity and diversity of food and drinks consumed by children aged 12-16 months. "The toddler years are a critical age in the development of long-term food preferences, but this is also the age that autonomy, independence and food fussiness begins," Ms Byrne said. "Childhood obesity in ...

Nutrition an issue for Indigenous Australians

2014-08-06
Nutrition has not been given enough priority in national Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health policy in recent years. This is the finding from a study published in the latest issue of Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health. Led by Jennifer Browne from La Trobe University, the study examined Aboriginal-specific health policies and strategies developed between 2000 and 2012. "Increased inclusion of nutrition in Aboriginal health policy was identified during the first half of this period, but less during the second where a much greater emphasis was ...

Crime Victims' Institute tracks the state of stalking in Texas

Crime Victims Institute tracks the state of stalking in Texas
2014-08-06
HUNTVILLE (8/6/14) -- According to a 2010 survey by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), an estimated 1.4 million women in Texas experience stalking during their lifetimes. Despite recent laws adopted in the state to protect stalking victims, little information is available about the crime or policies and procedures to aid the criminal justice system, according to a report from the Crime Victims' Institute (CVI). According to CDC estimates, 15.6 percent of the female population in Texas will experience stalking, slightly less than the 16.2 percent national ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Spinning fusion fuel for efficiency

The American Pediatric Society names Dr. Beth Tarini as the recipient of the 2025 Norman J. Siegel New Member Outstanding Science Award

New Clinical Study Confirms the Anti-Obesity Effects of Kimchi

Highly selective pathway for propyne semihydrogenation achieved via CoSb intermetallic catalyst

GERD linked to cardiovascular risk factors: New insights from Mendelian randomization study

Content moderators are influenced by online misinformation

Adulting, nerdiness and the importance of single-panel comics

Study helps explain how children learned for 99% of human history

The impact of misinformation on Spanish-language social media platforms

Populations overheat as major cities fail canopy goals: new research

By exerting “crowd control” over mouse cells, scientists make progress towards engineering tissues

First American Gastroenterological Association living guideline for moderate-to-severe ulcerative colitis

Labeling cell particles with barcodes

Groundwater pumping drives rapid sinking in California

Neuroscientists discover how the brain slows anxious breathing

New ion speed record holds potential for faster battery charging, biosensing

Haut.AI explores the potential of AI-enhanced fluorescence photography for non-invasive skin diagnostics

7-year study reveals plastic fragments from all over the globe are rising rapidly in the North Pacific Garbage Patch 

New theory reveals the shape of a single photon 

We could soon use AI to detect brain tumors

TAMEST recognizes Lyda Hill and Lyda Hill Philanthropies with Kay Bailey Hutchison Distinguished Service Award

Establishment of an immortalized red river hog blood-derived macrophage cell line

Neural networks: You might not need to buy every ticket to win the lottery

Healthy New Town: Revitalizing neighborhoods in the wake of aging populations

High exposure to everyday chemicals linked to asthma risk in children

How can brands address growing consumer scepticism?

New paradigm of quantum information technology revealed through light-matter interaction!

MSU researchers find trees acclimate to changing temperatures

World's first visual grading system developed to combat microplastic fashion pollution

Teenage truancy rates rise in English-speaking countries

[Press-News.org] New material structures bend like microscopic hair
Researchers say structures may be used in windows to wick away moisture