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

World's fastest photo-exfoliation

Osaka City University discovers world's fastest exfoliation of material with potential use for photoactuator production

2021-04-19
(Press-News.org) OSAKA, Japan. Look at any piece of machinery and you will see a complex network of moving parts, or actuators, each with its own function, all working together for a common goal. From this perspective, the way most machines differ is in the way their actuators are powered: excavators rely on compressed liquid (hydraulic), the brake system in a car uses compressed air (pneumatic), and a printer has electricity.

What if the moving parts of a machine could be powered by light? A machine made up of photoactuators would not need direct contact with the power source to move. Among its many possible functions, it could be accurately manipulated within places machines with electrical wiring or circuitry cannot - for example, the capillaries of the human body.

"The problem has been manipulating a material with light at the speed and size appropriate for photomechanical devices", says graduate student Masato Tamaoki. He was part of a research group, led by Professor Seiya Kobatake of the Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka City University that, using UV light on crystals made of a compound called diarylethene, peeled off crystals the size of 2 - 4 micrometers at the speed of 260 microseconds, making it the world's fastest exfoliation of a photomechanical material. Their results were published online in Crystal Growth & Design of the American Chemical Society on April 19, 2021.

"My lab has been exploring the photomechanical properties of diarylethene for many years now", says Professor Kobatake. They found that under UV light, the molecules of the compound demonstrated behaviors such as expansion/contraction, bending, twisting and peeling. "There were only two examples of the peeling behavior, making it a very rare motion," states Mr. Tamaoki, "we focused on this issue by experimenting with crystal size and photoirradiation conditions".

They found that under the strain of UV light penetrating relatively all the diarylethene, it would change to a blue color and crack. However, if the light was focused on a vicinity of the crystal, peeling of the exposed section occurred at a surprising 260 microseconds. Comparing this to previously recorded measurements of 10s of seconds to 10s of minutes, "we are very pleased to have discovered the world's fastest, photoreversible exfoliation behavior, which is expected to become a new manufacturing method for photoactuator materials," states Mr. Tamaoki.

INFORMATION:

We are Osaka City University - the oldest research university in Osaka. With 9 undergraduate faculties and 11 graduate schools all dedicated to making urban life better, energy cleaner, and people healthier and happier, we have won numerous awards and have produced 2 Nobel laureates. For more information, please visit our website at https://www.osaka-cu.ac.jp/en



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fat grafts enhanced with ADSCs show promise in treating facial scleroderma

Fat grafts enhanced with ADSCs show promise in treating facial scleroderma
2021-04-19
Durham, NC - A study released today in STEM CELLS Translational Medicine suggests a new way to correct facial atrophy of localized scleroderma (LoS) in patients. It shows how applying grafts made up of the patient's own fat enhanced with adipose?derived stem cells (ADSCs) is a safe, feasible and attractive alternative to conventional fat grafting or fat grafting combined with stromal vascular fraction in treating this condition. LoS is a rare autoimmune disease caused when the body makes too much collagen, which results in the skin becoming stiff and hard. "Presenting mainly as subcutaneous tissue atrophy and hyperpigmentation, this disorder seriously ...

New COVID-19 vaccine may offer broad protection from coronaviruses

New COVID-19 vaccine may offer broad protection from coronaviruses
2021-04-19
A COVID-19 vaccine that could provide protection against existing and future strains of the COVID-19 coronavirus, and other coronaviruses, and cost about $1 a dose has shown promising results in early animal testing. Vaccines created by UVA Health's Steven L. Zeichner, MD, PhD, and Virginia Tech's Xiang-Jin Meng, MD, PhD, prevented pigs from being becoming ill with a pig model coronavirus, porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV). The vaccine was developed using an innovative approach that Zeichner says might one day open the door to a universal vaccine for coronaviruses, ...

Incongruent messaging key to getting people to register as organ donors

2021-04-19
A new study from the UBC Sauder School of Business finds a subtle shift in organ donor messaging can lead to a big boost in registration. Organ donation saves countless lives every year, and most people think it's the right thing to do -- but when it comes to people actually registering to donate, the numbers around the world are surprisingly low. This is particularly so in countries that rely on informed consent and require people to learn about organ donation before they opt-in to register as a donor. In fact, in Canada, just 32 per cent of people have registered to become organ donors. Transplant agencies have tried a range of strategies to increase donation levels, including the introduction of in-hospital organ donation coordinators, greater public ...

New model describes the (scaling) laws of the jungle

New model describes the (scaling) laws of the jungle
2021-04-19
A forest looks like a hotbed of randomness, with trees and plants scattered in wild and capricious diversity. But appearances can be deceiving, say a trio of complexity researchers at the Santa Fe Institute (SFI). Underneath that apparent messiness lurk extraordinary regularities, governed by the biological mechanisms that drive universal forces of growth, death, and competition. In a paper published April 9 in the journal PNAS, the SFI group, led by Program Postdoctoral Fellow and now Complexity Science Hub Vienna Postdoctoral Scientist Eddie Lee, describes a new framework that can reproduce those spatial and temporal patterns that emerge in places and ...

UW researchers studying how to make online arguments productive

UW researchers studying how to make online arguments productive
2021-04-19
The internet seems like the place to go to get into fights. Whether they're with a family member or a complete stranger, these arguments have the potential to destroy important relationships and consume a lot of emotional energy. Researchers at the University of Washington worked with almost 260 people to understand these disagreements and to develop potential design interventions that could make these discussions more productive and centered around relationship-building. The team published these findings this April in the latest issue of the Proceedings of the ACM in Human Computer Interaction Computer-Supported Cooperative Work. "Despite the fact that online spaces are often described as toxic and polarizing, ...

Leg muscle action assists blood flow independently of age

Leg muscle action assists blood flow independently of age
2021-04-19
Chronic lower-limb edema (CLE) -- the permanent accumulation of fluid in the leg -- often occurs in elderly people. The condition leads to various physical and mental problems, including difficulty in walking or moving, fatigue and anxiety. One cause of CLE is the lack of physical activity, which is associated with a decrease in muscle pump action. The latter refers to the leg muscle's acting as a blood pump: when contracted, the muscle squeezes veins together, forcing blood to flow. The question whether muscle pump action systematically changes with age has not been thoroughly investigated; now, Junko Sugama from Kanazawa University and colleagues have addressed this issue. In addition, they studied how leg posture affects muscle pump action. For their study, Sugama ...

Mirror, mirror...viewing your own face, even subconsciously, is rewarding

Mirror, mirror...viewing your own face, even subconsciously, is rewarding
2021-04-19
Osaka, Japan - As humans, we each have a powerful ability to easily recognize our own face. But now, researchers from Japan have uncovered new information about how our cognitive systems enable us to distinguish our own face from those of others, even when the information is presented subliminally. In a study published this month in Cerebral Cortex, researchers from Osaka University have revealed that a central element of the dopamine reward pathway in the brain was activated when participants were subliminally shown images of their face. This provides new clues regarding the underlying processes of the brain involved in self-facial recognition. When we are ...

Evidence for glaciation predating MIS-6 in the eastern Nyainqêntanglha, southeastern Tibet

Evidence for glaciation predating MIS-6 in the eastern Nyainqêntanglha, southeastern Tibet
2021-04-19
Southeastern Tibet is one of the most glaciated regions on the Tibetan Plateau both at present and during the Quaternary. Numerical dating of glacial deposits has allowed the establishment of a provisional chronology of Quaternary glacial fluctuations in this region, with the oldest glaciation (Guxiang Glaciation) occurring in marine oxygen isotope stage 6 (MIS-6). However, glaciations predating MIS-6 have been identified at many locations on the Tibetan Plateau and its surrounding mountains, posing the question: as a major glaciation center both at present and during the Quaternary, did a glaciation prior to MIS-6 ever occur in southeastern Tibet? Zhou et al. (2021) provide evidence for a glacier advance in the Bodui Zangbo River ...

Where's my horse-sized rabbit?

Wheres my horse-sized rabbit?
2021-04-19
Japan -- Next to cat videos, watching small and cuddly rabbits is probably one of the most popular internet pastimes. Plus they appear in literature as well as in traditional folklore spanning numerous cultures, thanks likely to the fact that rabbits reside on every continent except Antarctica. Yet despite their ubiquity, lagomorphs -- including rabbits, hares, and pikas -- are rather limited in their size diversity. Compare this to their evolutionary sisters, the rodents, which vary in size from the four-gram pygmy mouse to capybaras weighing as much as 50 kilograms. So why don't we see rabbits rivaling the sizes of horses? To answer this question, a research team ...

Where are the women on the Spanish-language Wikipedia site?

2021-04-19
With its more than 40 million articles in 301 different languages, Wikipedia is one of the largest human collaboration efforts in history. One of the main pillars on which this wish to bring together the sum of all knowledge is based is the achievement of a neutral space. However, several studies suggest that the site suffers from a persistent gender bias as regards both content and the composition of its community. An analysis of the gender gap in the Spanish-language version of Wikipedia by an interdisciplinary team at the UOC has revealed that only 11.6% of its registered editors are women. According to the new study, which has been published in the journal PLOS ONE, the difference could be partially due to female editors being less ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Scientists unlock secrets behind flowering of the king of fruits

Texas A&M researchers illuminate the mysteries of icy ocean worlds

Prosthetic material could help reduce infections from intravenous catheters

Can the heart heal itself? New study says it can

Microscopic discovery in cancer cells could have a big impact

Rice researchers take ‘significant leap forward’ with quantum simulation of molecular electron transfer

Breakthrough new material brings affordable, sustainable future within grasp

How everyday activities inside your home can generate energy

Inequality weakens local governance and public satisfaction, study finds

Uncovering key molecular factors behind malaria’s deadliest strain

UC Davis researchers help decode the cause of aggressive breast cancer in women of color

Researchers discovered replication hubs for human norovirus

SNU researchers develop the world’s most sensitive flexible strain sensor

Tiny, wireless antennas use light to monitor cellular communication

Neutrality has played a pivotal, but under-examined, role in international relations, new research shows

Study reveals right whales live 130 years — or more

Researchers reveal how human eyelashes promote water drainage

Pollinators most vulnerable to rising global temperatures are flies, study shows

DFG to fund eight new research units

Modern AI systems have achieved Turing's vision, but not exactly how he hoped

Quantum walk computing unlocks new potential in quantum science and technology

Construction materials and household items are a part of a long-term carbon sink called the “technosphere”

First demonstration of quantum teleportation over busy Internet cables

Disparities and gaps in breast cancer screening for women ages 40 to 49

US tobacco 21 policies and potential mortality reductions by state

AI-driven approach reveals hidden hazards of chemical mixtures in rivers

Older age linked to increased complications after breast reconstruction

ESA and NASA satellites deliver first joint picture of Greenland Ice Sheet melting

Early detection model for pancreatic necrosis improves patient outcomes

Poor vascular health accelerates brain ageing

[Press-News.org] World's fastest photo-exfoliation
Osaka City University discovers world's fastest exfoliation of material with potential use for photoactuator production