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

Channeling mechanical energy in a preferred direction

2023-04-13
(Press-News.org) A research group led by scientists from the RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science have developed a unique material, based on nanofillers embedded in a hydrogel, that can channel mechanical energy in one direction but not the other, acting in a “nonreciprocal” way. With this composite material--which can be constructed at various sizes--the team was able to use vibrational up-and-down movements to make liquid droplets rise within a material against gravity. Using this material could thus make it possible to make use of random vibrations and move matter in a preferred direction.

Channeling energy in a preferred direction is an important property that actually makes life possible. Many basic biological functions such as photosynthesis and cellular respiration are made possible by channeling random fluctuations in nature in a nonreciprocal way, to drive a system away from increasing entropy, like the famed Maxwell’s demon. For example, devices that allow energy to move preferentially are in electronics, where they allow AC current to be transformed into DC current. Similar devices are used in the fields of photonics, magnetism, and sound. However, despite the many potential uses, creating devices that channel mechanical energy has proven to be more difficult.

Now, a RIKEN-led group has developed a remarkable but uniform material that is relatively easy to produce and can perform this function. To create it, the group used a hydrogel--a soft material made mainly of water and a polyacrylamide network--and embedded graphene oxide nanofillers into it at a tilted angle. The hydrogel is fixed to the floor, so that the top part can move when subjected to a shear force but not the bottom. And the fillers are set at a tilted angle, so that they angle clockwise from top to bottom. When a shear force is applied from right to left into the leaning nanofillers, they tend to buckle and hence lose their resistance. But if the force is from the other direction, and the nanofillers are facing away from it, the applied shear merely makes them stretch even longer, and they maintain their strength. This allows the sheet to deform in one direction but not the other, and in fact the group measured this difference, finding that the material was approximately 60 times as resistant in one direction than the other.

As an experiment to demonstrate what this could actually do, they created a block of the material and placed it on a vibrating stand. Depending on the tilt direction of the embedded nanofillers, the material was able to channel the vibrational energy through the material to make droplets move to the right or left. They could also use the vibrations to drive a circular motion that could be controlled to be either clockwise or anticlockwise. When setting up the vibrating stand vertically, drops of colored liquid that were placed on the hydrogel moved upward against gravity as if by magic. In this way, alternating vibrational movements, which are usually not of any use, were channeled to create net motion.

Finally, as a further test, in collaboration with researchers from the RIKEN Hakubi Fellows program, the group placed Caenorhabditis elegans worms on the material, and although their movements are normally random, they ended up all moving to one side or the another of the hydrogel, depending on the tilt direction of the embedded nanofillers.

According to Yasuhiro Ishida of the RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science who led the project, “It was a remarkable and surprising result, seeing how mechanical energy could be channeled in one direction preferentially, in such a clear way, and using a material that is rather easy to make and quite scalable. In the future, we plan to find applications for this material, with the hope that we can use it to make effective use of vibrational energy that, up until now, has been seen as waste.”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Chemists redesign biological PHAs, ‘dream’ biodegradable plastics

Chemists redesign biological PHAs, ‘dream’ biodegradable plastics
2023-04-13
They’ve been called “dream” plastics: polyhydroxyalkanoates, or PHAs. Already the basis of a fledgling industry, they’re a class of polymers naturally created by living microorganisms, or synthetically produced from biorenewable feedstocks. They’re biodegradable in the ambient environment, including oceans and soil. But there’s a reason PHAs haven’t taken off as a sustainable, environmentally benign alternative to traditional plastics. Crystalline PHAs are brittle, so not as durable and convenient as conventional plastics. They cannot easily be melt-processed and recycled, making them expensive to produce. Colorado State ...

Bees flock to clearcut areas but numbers decline as forest canopy regrows, OSU research shows

Bees flock to clearcut areas but numbers decline as forest canopy regrows, OSU research shows
2023-04-13
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Native bees in the Oregon Coast Range are diverse and abundant in clearcut areas within a few years of timber harvest but their numbers drop sharply as planted trees grow and the forest canopy closes, research by Oregon State University shows. The findings are important for understanding the roles forest management might play in the conservation of a crucial pollinator group, the researchers said. The study, led by graduate student Rachel Zitomer and Jim Rivers, an animal ecologist in the OSU College of Forestry, was published in Ecological Applications. “The research demonstrates ...

Global study finds some women experience heavier menstrual flow after COVID-19 vaccination

2023-04-13
A new international study finds that women vaccinated for COVID-19 have a slightly higher risk for a heavier period after vaccination. The study, led by Oregon Health & Science University reproductive health services researcher Blair Darney, Ph.D., M.P.H., and physician-scientist Alison Edelman, M.D., M.P.H., published today in the British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology. These findings build on prior work from the same research team that first identified an association between COVID-19 vaccines ...

Virtual fitting rooms can be a double-edged sword

Virtual fitting rooms can be a double-edged sword
2023-04-13
AMES, IA – Driven by online shopping, a growing number of retailers have launched virtual fitting rooms in recent years. That includes Amazon, the top apparel seller in the U.S., along with Nike, Macy’s and Walmart. The virtual rooms allow shoppers to ‘try on’ clothes through interactive simulation technology and texture-mapped product images. It can cut down on returns and nudge hesitant shoppers to click the checkout button. But findings from a recently published study indicate virtual fitting rooms could backfire on retailers if they assume ...

Low-professionalism residents later draw higher patient complaints: Study

Low-professionalism residents later draw higher patient complaints: Study
2023-04-13
The first study to examine evaluation scores for professionalism and interpersonal communication skills among physicians-in-training and what happens afterward as these doctors begin their practice is reported in JAMA Network Open. The study tracked 9,340 early-career physicians from across the country.    The study finds a strong association between lower ratings for these competencies among residents in their last year of training and greater likelihood of unsolicited patient complaints among doctors during their first year of employment ...

Journal of Neuromuscular Diseases transitioning to Gold Open Access in 2023

2023-04-13
Amsterdam, April 13, 2023 – The Journal of Neuromuscular Diseases (JND), published by IOS Press, is pleased to announce that from July 1, 2023 (Volume 10, Issue 4), the journal will transition to a Gold Open Access publication. This means that all articles published after that date will be immediately and permanently freely available online for readers to view, download, share, and reuse, and will enable authors to more easily comply with funder and institutional mandates. “When JND launched almost 10 years ago, among our primary goals was and continues to ...

COVID lockdown allows study of tourism’s impact on Hawaii fishes

COVID lockdown allows study of tourism’s impact on Hawaii fishes
2023-04-13
During August 2019, more than 40,000 tourists visited Hawaii’s Molokini island to snorkel or dive. In March 2020 the worldwide COVID lockdown dropped that number to zero. The sudden and prolonged drop in visitors to one of the world’s most popular snorkeling spots provided scientists with a novel opportunity to study how underwater tourism impacts marine fishes. The results of their study, published in the most recent issue of PLOS One, will help resource managers better care for Molokini and other threatened marine habitats. The study’s lead author, Dr. Kevin Weng of William & Mary’s Virginia Institute of Marine Science, ...

Researchers find earlier intervention leads to greater improvements in young children on the autism spectrum

2023-04-13
Researchers from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP), Florida State University (FSU), and the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) have demonstrated that starting intervention coaching parents of autistic toddlers as early as 18 months leads to better gains in language, social communication, and daily living skills. Their findings were recently published in the journal Autism. While prior studies provided strong evidence for the benefits of early intervention in autism, many are correlation studies rather than randomized controlled studies that ...

Private lands stalling Brazil’s conservation efforts

Private lands stalling Brazil’s conservation efforts
2023-04-13
As Brazil seeks ways to protect its crucial Amazon Forest, a new study shows that excusing private landowners from conserving their precious land has come at a steep cost to global sustainability. In this week’s Nature Communications Earth & Environment, scientists at Michigan State University’s Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability (MSU-CSIS) as well as Brazil and the UK found that since 2012 more than half of the deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon has taken place on designated private conservation areas within rural private properties. However, ...

Hairs that help fish feel–and humans hear

Hairs that help fish feel–and humans hear
2023-04-13
CLEVELAND–By discovering how zebrafish use their hair cells to detect distant movement, a team of Case Western Reserve scientists may have found a path to help explain human hearing loss.   Even though the tiny water creatures and humans would appear to have nothing in common, the structure and function of the hair cells on zebrafish skin are nearly identical to cochlear hair cells found in the human inner ear.   In addition, both the fish and human cell receptors have a type of protein known as an “ion channel,” which converts the waves that the cells detect into electrical impulses that carry useful information.   However, in humans, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Archaeologists use AI to create prehistoric video game

Mitochondria migrate toward the cell membrane in response to high glucose levels

Tiny viral switch offers hope against drug-resistant bacteria

Most parents aware of early peanut introduction guidelines, but confused about details

HPV vaccine can protect against severe lesions of the vulva and vagina

Virtual care provision and emergency department use among children and youth

Quadrivalent HPV vaccine and high-grade vulvovaginal lesions

Insights into dry eyes gained from stem cell-derived tear glands 

Researchers identify 166 human pluripotent stem cell lines available for use in clinical applications

Europa Clipper instrument uniquely observed interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS

UN University Report challenges climate change as sole trigger of Syrian Civil War, exposing governance failures in drought response

Real estate investment trust (REIT) acquisition associated with hospital closure and bankruptcy

New Raman imaging system detects subtle tumor signals

Boston Children’s receives a $7.5 million grant from Aligning Research to Impact Autism (ARIA) to provide clinical research coordination for the IMPACT Network

Spray-on antibacterial coating offers new protection for plants against disease and drought

ESMT Berlin study: What makes a first offer successful in negotiations

Groundbreaking ceremony marks the beginning of CTAO-South Array construction in Chile

Why swearing makes you stronger

What prevents more cancer patients from enrolling in potentially life-saving clinical trials?

UK’s worst-case climate risks laid bare for lawmakers

A decline in churchgoing linked to more deaths of despair

TAMEST announces Maralice Conacci-Sorrell, Ph.D., UT Southwestern Medical Center, as 2026 Mary Beth Maddox Award & Lectureship Recipient

Global study to evaluate whether dengue outbreaks can be anticipated earlier

Chonnam National University researchers propose innovative voltage-loop control for power factor correction

Accelerating next-generation drug discovery with click-based construction of PROTACs

Detecting the hidden magnetism of altermagnets

$7M gift supports health research, engineering and athletics at UT San Antonio

NU-9 halts Alzheimer’s disease in animal model before symptoms begin

Hospitals acquired by real estate investment trusts associated with greater risk of bankruptcy, closure

City of Hope scientists study rare disorder to uncover mechanism and hormone regulation underlying fatty liver disease and sweet aversion

[Press-News.org] Channeling mechanical energy in a preferred direction