(Press-News.org) Touch the branches of Leptogorgia chilensis, a soft coral found along the Pacific coast from California to Chile, and its flexible arms stiffen, like Marvel’s Mr. Fantastic warding off a foe.
Now, Penn Engineers have discovered the mechanism underlying this astonishing ability, one that could advance fields as varied as medicine, robotics and manufacturing.
In a new paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), a group led by Ling Li, Associate Professor in Materials Science and Engineering and in Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics, describes how the coral’s skeleton — made of millions of mineral particles suspended in a gelatinous matrix — compacts itself to ward off danger.
“It’s almost like a traffic jam,” says Li. “When stimulated, the coral’s tissues expel water, shrinking the gel and squeezing the particles closer together until they jam in place.”
Physicists have long studied this phenomenon, known as “granular jamming,” by manipulating grainy substances like sand and coffee grounds, but this marks the first time granular jamming based on hard particles has been observed in a living organism.
“Imagine being able to adjust the stiffness of a surgical instrument or robotic arm,” says Chenhao Hu, a doctoral student in Li’s lab and the paper’s first author. “In this coral’s skeleton, nature has created an incredible material whose principles we can adapt for human use.”
Learning From Nature
For years, Li’s lab has studied the skeletons of undersea creatures, on the motivation that uncovering the basis of their material properties will lead to advances in engineering.
“They’re basically made of chalk,” he says, referring to calcium carbonate, the same cheap and plentiful white powder that forms eggshells, sticks of chalk, marble, limestone and pearls. “What gives their skeletons interesting properties is how the calcium carbonate is structured and organized.”
While marine biologists recognized long ago that soft corals like L. chilensis have skeletons containing granular particles, the grains’ shapes had primarily been used to classify different species. “Limited work has focused on the functional properties of the shapes themselves, particularly from the granular jamming point of view,” says Li.
Finding the Right Shape
Past research has recognized the potential of granular jamming in fields like manufacturing — one group developed a robotic grabber arm whose sand-filled “hand” envelops complex objects then stiffens to pick them up — but has relied on a few basic grain shapes.
“It’s hard to find the right shape,” says Hu. “They need to jam when they’re close together, which requires friction and interlocking, but still separate easily into a relaxed state.” Because of their varied geometry, sand and coffee grounds make studying the mechanics of the process challenging, while easy-to-manufacture spheres frequently slide past one another due to a lack of friction.
In a sense, nature provides a shortcut: if the Penn researchers could characterize the mineral particles, or sclerites, in L. chilensis, that might point to a novel, and perhaps better, shape for human systems that rely on granular jamming.
Measuring the Skeletons
Measuring about a tenth of a millimeter in size, the particles are somewhat cylindrical, like a rod studded with branching outgrowths at regular intervals. “Once the sclerites get close enough to their neighbors, their branches jam together, holding them in place,” explains Hu.
The researchers explored the material’s properties with advanced imaging techniques, computational modeling, and by poking and prodding preserved samples of the coral. “When we applied force to the samples,” says Hu, “the material system initially shrank, occupying less volume because the particles were closer together.”
Inspired by Nature
Ultimately, the researchers say, the paper points toward the benefits of studying nature to find new materials. “We just studied one coral species,” points out Li. “But there are many other soft coral species out there, which use different sclerite shapes, with potentially different properties.”
In the future, the skeleton of L. chilensis could serve as a point of comparison for other natural systems and inspire human engineers. “There are so many situations where we might want to selectively tune the stiffness of a material,” says Li. “In this coral, nature has given us a blueprint we can follow.”
This study was conducted at the University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Science (Penn Engineering); Virginia Tech; Brookhaven National Laboratory; Argonne National Laboratory; the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB); Harvard University; MIT; and the Zuse Institute Berlin, and was supported by the Human Frontier Science Program (Ref.-No: RGP016/2023), Penn Engineering, Virginia Tech, and the U.S. Department of Energy (DE-AC02-06CH11357, DE-SC0012704).
Additional co-authors include Zian Jia, Liuni Chen and Yang Geng of Penn Engineering; Ravi Tutika, Zhifei Deng, Hongshun Chen and Michael Bartlett of Virginia Tech; Xianghui Xiao of Brookhaven National Laboratory; Pavel D. Shevchenko of Argonne National Laboratory; Christoph Pierre of UCSB; James C. Weaver of Harvard and MIT; and Daniel Baum of the Zuse Institute Berlin.
END
From soft to solid: How a coral stiffens its skeleton on demand
Discovery of natural “jamming system” in a Pacific soft coral opens new directions for bio-inspired engineering
2025-10-27
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New software tool MARTi fast-tracks identification and response to microbial threats
2025-10-27
Metagenomics is the study of all organisms present in a particular environment, such as soil, water, or the human body. A key part of metagenomic analysis is understanding what species are present (classification), how much of each there is (abundance), and the function of the microorganisms present.
Real-time metagenomics - the immediate analysis of data while sequencing is in progress - holds the potential to speed up the detection, monitoring, and response to microbial threats in a multitude of settings, including agricultural, environmental, and biosecurity.
However, one of the key barriers to realising the full potential of real-time metagenomics is the ...
Rare brain cell may hold the key to preventing schizophrenia symptoms
2025-10-27
Difficulty completing everyday tasks. Failing memory. Unusually poor concentration.
For many people living with schizophrenia, cognitive challenges are part of daily life. Alongside well-known symptoms such as hallucinations and delusions, these difficulties can make it hard to live the life they want. That is why researchers at the University of Copenhagen are working to find ways to prevent such symptoms - and they may now be one step closer.
In a new study, researchers discovered that a specific ...
A new tool to find hidden ‘zombie cells’
2025-10-27
ROCHESTER, Minn. — When it comes to treating disease, one promising avenue is addressing the presence of senescent cells. These cells — also known as "zombie cells" — stop dividing but don't die off as cells typically do. They turn up in numerous diseases, including cancer and Alzheimer's disease, and in the process of aging. While potential treatments aim to remove or repair the cells, one hurdle has been finding a way to identify them among healthy cells in living tissue.
In the journal Aging Cell, Mayo Clinic ...
New Cleveland Clinic research finds up to 5% of Americans carry genetic mutations associated with cancer risk
2025-10-27
New Cleveland Clinic research reveals that up to 5% of Americans – approximately 17 million people – carry genetic mutations or “variants” linked to increased cancer susceptibility, regardless of risk factors like personal or family cancer history.
Published in JAMA, the study suggests that these mutations may be more common than previously thought and highlights the potential for expanded genetic screening to identify more individuals at risk and improve early detection.
The ...
Once tadpoles lose lungs, they never get them back
2025-10-27
ITHACA, N.Y. – Tadpole species that lost their lungs through evolution never re-evolve them, even when environmental change would make it advantageous – bucking long-standing assumptions about how lost traits can reemerge, according to a new Cornell University study.
Typical tadpoles have three main ways to get oxygen: from the air, with lungs; from the water, through gills; and from the air through their skin.
Curiously, all frogs have lungs, so tadpoles retain the developmental genetics to regain lungs when environmental pressures might favor having them but instead evolve alternate solutions for acquiring oxygen from the air.
The study, ...
Small group of users drive invasive species awareness on social media
2025-10-27
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — In the age of social media, the battle against invasive species in nature is increasingly unfolding online. A new study analyzing over 500,000 tweets posted between 2006 and 2021 examines public discourse around invasive species on the social media platform Twitter, which became X in 2023.
The study by an international team of researchers, including an ecologist at Penn State, was recently published in the journal Ecology & Society. The team found that mammals, especially urban pests like cats, pigs and squirrels, dominated ...
One bad safety review can tank an Airbnb booking — Even among thousands of positive ones, new study finds
2025-10-27
When finding the right Airbnb property, reviews really matter.
That’s the takeaway from new study involving the Binghamton University School of Management, which found that reviews mentioning an Airbnb property’s neighborhood safety problems can reduce bookings, lower nightly prices and make customers less likely to return — even if those represent a fraction of all the property’s online reviews.
The study, co-authored by Assistant Professor Yidan Sun, explores how platforms like Airbnb balance financial incentives with customer welfare. While platforms might be ...
Text-based system speeds up hospital discharges to long-term care
2025-10-27
ITHACA, N.Y. – Every day, millions of people are discharged after extended hospital stays, but matching these patients with appropriate care facilities can be arduous, often reliant on months-old, inaccurate data.
Now, a text message-based, hybrid computer-human system that regularly updates both patients’ and care facilities’ availability statuses, developed by a Cornell doctoral student, is smoothing that time-consuming process. The system was tested at a hospital in Hawaii for 14 months, beginning in early 2022, and helped place nearly 50 patients in care facilities.
In fact, the system worked so well, the hospital ...
California schools are losing tree canopy
2025-10-27
About 85% of elementary schools studied in California experienced some loss of trees between 2018 and 2022, according to a paper from the University of California, Davis, published this month in the journal Urban Forestry and Urban Greening.
Members of the UC Davis Urban Science Lab found that while the average decline was less than 2%, some districts in the Central Valley — including schools with few trees to lose – lost up to a quarter of their tree cover. The most severe losses were concentrated in Tulare ...
How people learn computer programming
2025-10-27
The ever-growing use of technology in society makes it clear that computer programming may be a valuable skill. But how do our brains learn to code? Cultural skills, like reading and math, typically emerge by repurposing brain networks that function for more innate purposes. Yun-Fei Liu and Marina Bedny, from Johns Hopkins University, tested whether this may be the case when people learn computer programming in their JNeurosci paper.
The researchers recorded brain activity in study volunteers with no programming experience before and after they learned how to code using Python. A neural network in the left ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Sport in middle childhood can breed respect for authority in adolescence
From novel therapies to first-in-human trials, City of Hope advances blood cancer care at the American Society of Hematology (ASH) annual conference
Research aims to strengthen the security of in-person voting machines
New study exposes hidden Alzheimer’s 'hot spots' in rural Maryland and what they reveal about America’s growing healthcare divide
ASH 2025: Study connects Agent Orange exposure to earlier and more severe cases of myelodysplastic syndrome
ASH 2025: New data highlights promise of pivekimab sunirine in two aggressive blood cancers
IADR elects George Belibasakis as vice-president
Expanding the search for quantum-ready 2D materials
White paper on leadership opportunities for AI to increase employee value released by University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies
ASH 2025: New combination approach aims to make CAR T more durable in lymphoma
‘Ready-made’ T-cell gene therapy tackles ‘incurable’ T-cell leukemia
How brain activity changes throughout the day
Australian scientists reveal new genetic risk for severe macular degeneration
GLP-1 receptor agonists likely have little or no effect on obesity-related cancer risk
Precision immunotherapy to improve sepsis outcomes
Insilico Medicine unveils winter edition of Pharma.AI, accelerating the path to pharmaceutical superintelligence
Study finds most people trust doctors more than AI but see its potential for cancer diagnosis
School reopening during COVID-19 pandemic associated with improvement in children’s mental health
Research alert: Old molecules show promise for fighting resistant strains of COVID-19 virus
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology supplement highlights advances in theranostics and opportunities for growth
New paper rocks earthquake science with a clever computational trick
ASH 2025: Milder chemo works for rare, aggressive lymphoma
Olfaction written in bones: New insights into the evolution of the sense of smell in mammals
Engineering simulations rewrite the timeline of the evolution of hearing in mammals
New research links health impacts related to 'forever chemicals' to billions in economic losses
Unified EEG imaging improves mapping for epilepsy surgery
$80 million in donations propels UCI MIND toward world-class center focused on dementia
Illinois research uncovers harvest and nutrient strategies to boost bioenergy profits
How did Bronze Age plague spread? A sheep might solve the mystery
Mental health professionals urged to do their own evaluations of AI-based tools
[Press-News.org] From soft to solid: How a coral stiffens its skeleton on demandDiscovery of natural “jamming system” in a Pacific soft coral opens new directions for bio-inspired engineering