(Press-News.org) If you’ve ever added liquid to a hot frying pan, maybe you noticed how the droplets bubbled up and skittered across the sizzling surface, rather than immediately flattening and wetting. This happens because the pan’s heat starts boiling the undersides of the droplets, producing vapor that acts as an insulating cushion on which they can – momentarily – dance.
Previously, scientists have produced a room-temperature version of this phenomenon – known as the Leidenfrost effect – by replacing the hot surface with a rapidly vibrating liquid bath. In these experiments, the vibrations produced a thin film of air on which the liquid droplets could bounce and hover perpetually.
Now, researchers in EPFL’s School of Engineering have shown experimentally that an oil droplet can bounce on a vibrating solid surface at room temperature for up to five minutes.
“What’s interesting here is that previous observations of perpetually bouncing droplets were determined by the changing surface of the vibrating liquid bath, but in our case the surface is solid, so the drop’s own deformations are driving its unique behavior,” explains John Kolinski, head of the Engineering Mechanics of Soft Interfaces Lab. “Our work provides new physics insights and highlights the potential for precision manipulation of small liquid quantities in air.”
The scientists have published their observations, along with a model to explain and predict them, in the journal Physical Review Letters.
Pharmaceutical precision
In their experiments, the researchers released a 1.6-millimeter droplet of silicon oil over a solid surface, beneath which a stage produced controlled vibrations. First author and PhD student Lebo Molefe likens it to keeping a ball bouncing on a table tennis paddle. “If we replace the ball with a liquid drop, we find that it can perpetually bounce above a thin air layer on a vibrating ‘paddle’, which in our case is made of mica – a special material that is atomically smooth,” she says.
By playing with the frequency and amplitude of these vibrations, the researchers produced two distinct droplet behaviors: some frequencies made the droplet appear to bounce like a basketball, while others made it move rapidly up and down without ever leaving the thin air cushion above the mica. As Molefe explains, the transition between these two states is linked to the way the droplet’s surface bulges and deforms as it interacts with the rigid surface below: “To ‘jump off’ the surface, the drop needs enough time to flatten first, so surface tension causes it to store energy like a coiled spring. At high vibration frequencies, there’s not enough time for this to happen, so the drop appears to be stuck near the surface.”
To interpret their observations, Laboratory of Fluid Mechanics and Instabilities researcher Tomas Fullana led numerical simulations aimed at characterizing the complex dynamics of the droplet’s rebound, facilitating the development of a model that allowed the team to simulate and accurately predict their measured bouncing behaviors.
Interestingly, they found that the droplet’s hover time appeared to be limited only by its lateral progress across the mica surface, as it would eventually encounter a defect that ruptured the air film beneath, triggering the usual ‘splat’. Otherwise, says Fullana, “our numerical simulations show that a drop could retain enough kinetic energy to bounce for an extended period, and possibly indefinitely.”
The researchers say their findings could change how scientists think about handling extremely small quantities of liquid in air at room temperature – an important challenge in the pharmaceutical industry, where chemical purity and precision are paramount. For example, in a proof-of-concept experiment, the EPFL team succeeded in controlling the sideways movement of their bouncing droplet on the mica surface, using ‘tweezers’ made of tiny jets of compressed air.
END
The tiny droplets that bounce without bursting
EPFL researchers have discovered that a droplet of liquid can bounce for several minutes – and perhaps indefinitely – over a vibrating solid surface. The seemingly simple observation has big implications for physics and chemistry.
2025-10-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Immunotherapy after surgery shows promise in treating rare, aggressive skin cancer
2025-10-20
Note: Abstract #6267, titled ECOG-ACRIN EA6174: Surgically Treated Adjuvant Merkel Cell Carcinoma with Pembrolizumab, is scheduled to be presented during the European Society for Medical Oncology meeting on Monday, Oct. 20, at 2:30 a.m. ET in the Cologne Auditorium, Messe Berlin, Berlin.
A drug that harnesses the immune system to attack cancer cells has proved successful in preventing a rare and aggressive form of skin cancer from spreading to other organs when given immediately after surgery, a new study shows.
Led by researchers at NYU ...
Immunotherapy after surgery shows potential in preventing the spread of aggressive skin cancer
2025-10-20
A new cancer clinical trial by the ECOG-ACRIN Cancer Research Group (ECOG-ACRIN) shows that a drug that utilizes the body’s immune system to target and eliminate cancer cells appeared to reduce the risk of distant metastases for an aggressive form of skin cancer when given immediately after surgery, but did not significantly reduce the overall risk of recurrence, which was a co-primary endpoint of the trial. The randomized phase 3 STAMP trial (EA6174) is the largest clinical study to date evaluating pembrolizumab, ...
What is the extent of disparities in cancer clinical trials among low- and middle-income countries?
2025-10-20
New research reveals that the number and complexity of cancer clinical trials since 2001 have varied across low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), with economic growth contributing to disparities, but only to a certain extent. The findings are published by Wiley online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society.
Although LMICs are expected to experience the greatest global burden of cancer in the coming years, cancer clinical trials are disproportionally concentrated in high-income countries. Because evidence suggests that LMICs have increased the number of cancer clinical trials over the last few decades, researchers investigated disparities ...
Invisible poison: Airborne mercury from gold mining is contaminating African food crops, new study warns
2025-10-20
In a recent study published today in the European Geosciences Union (EGU) journal Biogeosciences, scientists have confirmed that mercury pollution from artisanal and small-scale gold mining (ASGM) is contaminating food crops not through the soil, as previously believed, but directly from the air. Driven by the surging price of gold, which has increased by more than tenfold since 2000, the rapid expansion of unregulated mining in these regions raises urgent questions about food security, human health, and environmental justice
The study, conducted by an international team of scientists led by Excellent ...
Nearly half of Finns with chronic conditions find medication therapy a burden
2025-10-20
According to a recent study, 44% of people with chronic conditions who responded to a population-based survey experienced medication-related burden (MRB). The burden was most common among people with diabetes, heart disease, rheumatic disease or some other musculoskeletal disorder. The greatest burden was caused by factors associated with health care, such as fragmented care and the cost of medicines, as well as adverse drug reactions or concerns about them.
“Other factors linked with MRB were poor health status, limits on functional capacity and low income,” says Pharmacist and Doctoral Researcher Heidi Mikkola from the School of Pharmacy at the University of ...
Do animals fall for optical illusions? What fish and birds can teach us about perception
2025-10-20
Have you ever looked at two circles of exactly the same size and sworn one was larger? If so, your eyes have been tricked by the Ebbinghaus illusion, a classic example of how context can shape what we see. Place a circle among other smaller circles, and it seems bigger; place it among larger ones, and it shrinks before our eyes. This illusion fascinates psychologists because it reveals that perception is not a mirror of the outside world but a clever construction of the brain.
But here is the question that inspired our study: do other animals fall for the same tricks? If a tiny fish or a bird perceives ...
New guideline emphasizes conversations about mood, mental health between patients and clinicians
2025-10-20
Depression is a mental illness, and support for depression can improve emotions, thoughts, and well-being. A new guideline from the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care recommends that patients aged 18 and older talk to their health care providers about depression rather than undergo routine screening with standard tools, like questionnaires. The guideline is published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) https://www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.250237.
In Canada, depression is common, with about 1 in 10 people (without bipolar disorder) experiencing depression in their lifetimes. It negatively affects how a person ...
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers observe significant reduction in diagnosis of food allergies following expert guidelines encouraging early peanut exposure
2025-10-20
Philadelphia, October 20, 2025 – Peanuts represent one of the most common causes of immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated, or anaphylactic, food allergies in children, yet a landmark study found that early introduction of peanut to infants may lower their risk of developing this allergy. Now, a new study from researchers from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) has shown that the rates of diagnosis of peanut and other IgE-mediated food allergies have declined since the adoption of guidelines encouraging early introduction practices.
The findings, published today ...
ESMO 2025: VT3989 continues to show promising early results in patients with advanced mesothelioma
2025-10-19
VT3989 is a first-in-class YAP-TEAD inhibitor from Vivace Therapeutics that is currently in Phase I/II trials for patients with advanced solid tumors, with a focus on refractory mesothelioma
In this trial, VT3989 demonstrated notable antitumor activity, with a disease control rate of 86% at the clinically optimized dosing levels
These data provide the first clinical proof-of-concept for effectively drugging the Hippo-YAP-TEAD pathway
VT3989 was awarded Orphan Drug Designation and Fast Track Designation for the treatment of mesothelioma by the FDA
BERLIN, OCTOBER 19, 2025 ― The first-in-class YAP-TEAD inhibitor ...
Study finds COVID-19 mRNA vaccine sparks immune response to fight cancer
2025-10-19
Patients with advanced lung or skin cancer who received a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine within 100 days of starting immunotherapy drugs lived significantly longer than those who did not get the vaccine, researchers have found.
The observation by researchers at the University of Florida and the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center is a defining moment in a decade-plus of research testing mRNA-based therapeutics designed to “wake up” the immune system against cancer. Building on a previous UF study, the observation also marks a significant step toward a long-awaited universal cancer vaccine to ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Climate extremes triggered rare coral disease and mass mortality on the Great Barrier Reef
Direct observation reveals “two-in-one” roles of plasma turbulence
Humans rank between meerkats and beavers in monogamy ‘league table’
US fossil reveals early mass-burial event and ancient microbial attack
Sedative choice could improve outcomes for breathing tube patients
New superconducting thin film for quantum computer chips
Simulations reveal protein "dynamin" constricts cell membranes by loosening its grip
Nearly 1 in 5 UK emergency department patients cared for in corridors/waiting rooms
Heavy energy drink intake may pose serious stroke risk, doctors warn
Violence against women and children among top health threats: New global study reveals disease burden far larger than previously estimated
Predicting who is at risk of developing type 1 diabetes, as new drugs now available
New gene-mapping method unlocks hidden drivers of cancer
Ocean current and seabed shape influence warm water circulation under ice shelves
Call to increase funding for ‘invisible’ Deaf victim-survivors of domestic abuse
University of Maryland School of Medicine names distinguished scientist and academic leader Gerald M. Wilson, PhD, as Chair of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Receptors in mammary glands make livestock and humans inviting hosts for avian flu
Icy hot plasmas
Treating adults with autism: Maryland Clinical Center offers national blueprint for care after pediatric transition
University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies releases white paper on reclaiming control to build workforce resilience
NCCN Summit seeks to improve care for veterans and first responders with cancer from line-of-duty exposure
ERC Consolidator Grant for soft robotics researcher
Dual-action arts and wellbeing program transforms dementia care
The global plastic waste trade contributes to coastal litter in importing countries, study shows
UT Dallas partners with Tech Mahindra on AI innovation
Blinking less could signal the brain is working harder to listen, Concordia study shows
Male bonobos track females’ reproductive cycle to maximize mating success
New report outlines science priorities for human Mars exploration
Want to curb cannabis-related crashes? Don’t forget older adults, study finds
Expectant management vs medication for patent ductus arteriosus in preterm infants
Pew funds 7 new biomedical research collaborations
[Press-News.org] The tiny droplets that bounce without burstingEPFL researchers have discovered that a droplet of liquid can bounce for several minutes – and perhaps indefinitely – over a vibrating solid surface. The seemingly simple observation has big implications for physics and chemistry.