From noise to power: A symmetric ratchet motor discovery
Researchers turn random chaotic vibrations into useful motion—paving the way to new energy-harvesting technologies
2025-09-11
(Press-News.org)
Vibrations are everywhere—from the hum of machinery to the rumble of transport systems. Usually, these random motions are wasted and dissipated without producing any usable work. Recently, scientists have been fascinated by “ratchet systems” which are mechanical systems that rectify chaotic vibrations into directional motion. In biology, molecular motors achieve this feat within living cells to drive the essential processes by converting random molecular collisions into purposeful motions. However, at a large scale, these ratchet systems have always relied on built-in asymmetry, such as gears or uneven surfaces.
Moving beyond this reliance on asymmetry, a team of researchers led by Ms. Miku Hatatani, a Ph.D. student at the Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Doshisha University, Japan, along with Mr. Junpei Oguni, graduate school alumnus at the Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Doshisha University, Japan, Professor Daigo Yamamoto and Professor Akihisa Shioi from the Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science at Doshisha University, demonstrate the world’s first symmetric ratchet motor. Published in Volume 35, Issue 8 of the journal Chaos on August 01, 2025, the study describes how a simple circular disk, placed on randomly vibrating particles, can spontaneously break symmetry and spin in a single direction.
“We found that you don’t need a special structure to create a ratchet motor,” explains Ms. Hatatani. “A simple disk, without any asymmetry, can break the symmetry on its own and start spinning in one direction.”
To demonstrate the same, the researchers placed a circular acrylic disk on a shallow layer of glass beads which were contained in a vibrating dish. When vibrated, the beads bounced randomly colliding with the circular disk. But instead of wobbling aimlessly, the disk started to tilt slightly and then began to rotate in a single direction. This directed spin persisted for several seconds, despite the underlying randomness of the particle motion.
The underlying principle of this effect lies in spontaneous symmetry breaking. Initially, the beads are evenly distributed beneath the disk, but as the vibration continues, they gradually accumulate on one side causing the disk to tilt. This tilt, in turn, reinforces the uneven distribution of particles, locking the system into a stable spinning state.
To further confirm the physics behind this, the researchers built a mathematical model based on the precession of a spinning top. This model reproduced the same experimental results, confirming that collisions of the randomly moving particles were enough to sustain the spin in one direction.
“Fundamentally, the system organizes itself,” says Prof. Shioi. “The randomness of the particles becomes the very source of order, driving the disk’s rotation.”
Beyond its novelty, the discovery also hints at future innovations. Noisy vibrations are abundant in daily life. Harnessing this random energy for extraction of regulated motion could inspire new energy-harvesting technologies. This could also extend to real-world applications like powering small devices or sensors without the need of external energy sources.
Moreover, the study also has broad implications in physics. By showing that symmetry itself can break spontaneously to produce motion, it deepens our understanding of non-equilibrium systems and active matter. Looking ahead, the researchers believe insights from their study could pave the way for innovative technologies—helping engineers design systems that extract useful work from ubiquitous background noise at different scales.
“Overall, our study highlights a universal scientific principle that even without external control, order can emerge from disorder,” concludes Prof. Shioi.
About Ms. Miku Hatatani from Doshisha University, Japan
Ms. Miku Hatatani is currently a Ph.D. student in the Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science at the Graduate School of Doshisha University. She is also a member of the Laboratory of Molecular Chemical Engineering at Doshisha University. Her research interests include biological ratchet motors, Brownian ratchets and its engineering as well as a broad interest in nonequilibrium phenomena and nonlinear science.
Funding information
This work was supported by JST SPRING under Grant No. JPMJSP2129 and KAKENHI under Grant No. 22K03560.
Media contact:
Organization for Research Initiatives & Development
Doshisha University
Kyotanabe, Kyoto 610-0394, JAPAN
E-mail:jt-ura@mail.doshisha.ac.jp
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-09-11
A landmark study led by the University of Sydney has found no evidence that family-based early obesity prevention programs, such as home visits from health professionals or community parent groups, improve overall body mass index (BMI) in young children.
Published in The Lancet, the study was led by Dr Kylie Hunter from the Faculty of Medicine and Health as part of the TOPCHILD collaboration with multiple scientists including those at the University Medical Center Rostock and Flinders University.
Early weight is a strong predictor of future weight ...
2025-09-11
Tsukuba, Japan—The rapid rise of social media has enabled real-time interaction among users, accelerating and complicating the ways emotions influence human behavior. Yet the specific mechanisms through which emotions are transmitted and tied to viewer responses, particularly in settings where video and viewer comments are synchronized, remain poorly understood.
Grounded in the Emotions as Social Information (EASI) theory, which argues that emotional expressions function as vital social signals, the research team examined more than 50,000 barrage comments. ...
2025-09-11
New research from the University of Sydney’s Charles Perkins Centre has found that genes play an active role in shaping the bacteria found in our gut, questioning the idea that gut health is influenced only by diet.
The gut microbiome is increasingly seen as vital to overall health, with Australia's gut health supplement industry valued at over $400 million in 2024.
“After decades of research linking the gut microbiome to almost every chronic disease, it may seem like we’re all ...
2025-09-11
Research led by Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and the Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Programme shows that over half of hospital patients with breathlessness had died within a year of admission (51%), as opposed to just 26% of those without the symptom.
Most of these patients had more than one condition that cause breathlessness, including pneumonia, anaemia, heart failure and TB.
The findings demonstrate the importance of integrated, patient-centred care, researchers say, to tackle the burden of high mortality ...
2025-09-11
Summary
Led by Assistant Professor Kou Li, a research group in Chuo University, Japan, has developed a synergetic strategy among non-destructive terahertz (THz)–infrared (IR) photo-monitoring techniques and ultrabroadband sensitive imager sheets toward demonstrating in-line realtime multi-scale quality inspections of pharmaceutical agent pills, with a recent paper publication in Light: Science & Applications.
While non-destructive in-line monitoring at manufacturing sites is essential for ...
2025-09-10
For millennia, Indigenous people living in Alaska and Canada’s Yukon territory have relied on Chinook salmon. The large, fatty fish provide essential nutrients for Arctic living and have influenced traditions and languages across generations.
But over the past three decades, many communities have been unable to fish Chinook amid a sharp salmon population decline.
The situation could worsen as climate change warms rivers in the Arctic, stunting salmon growth, according to a study published August 6 in Scientific Reports led by the University of Colorado Boulder.
“The ...
2025-09-10
(MEMPHIS, Tenn. – September 10, 2025) Mitochondria act as energy factories in cells and have their own, separate DNA. Mutations to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) have been observed in cancer, but it has been unclear how these changes might affect cancer growth. To find answers, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital scientists combined computational tools and DNA sequencing technologies to examine these mtDNA mutations in cancer cells closely. Their new method lets scientists pinpoint when these mutations occur, how they change as cancer develops and whether they affect how cancer ...
2025-09-10
In a new study published in Science Advances Sept. 10, a team of UC Davis researchers tracked the movement of fluorescent particles inside the cells of microscopic worms, providing unprecedented insights into cellular crowding in a multicellular animal. They found that the cytoplasm inside the worms was significantly more crowded and compartmentalized than in single-celled yeast or mammalian tissue culture cells, which are more commonly used to gauge internal cellular dynamics.
This difference highlights the importance ...
2025-09-10
Although Latinos and Hispanics are at elevated risk for Alzheimer’s disease and account for almost half of Los Angeles County’s population, a recent UCLA Health study finds that accessible digital resources for these communities remain in short supply since the COVID-19 pandemic.
The study, published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, found only a handful of the 15 websites from the county’s top Alzheimer’s disease organizations had features or tools to improve access for Latino and Hispanic families during and amid the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Senior ...
2025-09-10
IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON PRESS RELEASE
Peer Reviewed / Observational study / People
Under STRICT EMBARGO until:
Wednesday 10th September 2025
23:30 (UK Time) / 18:30 (US Eastern Time)
Chronic disease deaths decline globally, but progress is slowing
**Country-level data available, see notes to editors**
Mortality from chronic diseases fell in 80% of countries in the decade leading up to the COVID-19 pandemic (2010-2019)
Progress has slowed, with 60% of countries performing worse than in the preceding decade
Among high-income ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] From noise to power: A symmetric ratchet motor discovery
Researchers turn random chaotic vibrations into useful motion—paving the way to new energy-harvesting technologies