Researchers
from the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
(SEAS) have developed a programmable metafluid with tunable springiness,
optical properties, viscosity and even the ability to transition between a
Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluid.
The first-of-its-kind metafluid uses a
suspension of small, elastomer spheres—between 50 to 500 microns—that buckle
under pressure, radically changing the characteristics of the fluid. The
metafluid could be used in everything from hydraulic actuators to program
robots, to intelligent shock absorbers that can dissipate energy depending on
the intensity of the impact, to optical devices that can transition from clear
to opaque.
The research is published in Nature.
"We are just scratching the surface
of what is possible with this new class of fluid," said Adel Djellouli, a
Research Associate in Materials Science and Mechanical Engineering at SEAS and
first author of the paper. "With this one platform, you could do so many
different things in so many different fields."
Tunable optics with a Harvard logo displayed
below the metafluid. Credit: Harvard SEAS
Metamaterials—artificially
engineered materials whose properties are determined by their structure rather
than composition—have been widely used in a range of applications for years.
But most of the materials—such as the metalenses pioneered in the lab of
Federico Capasso, Robert L. Wallace Professor of Applied Physics and Vinton
Hayes Senior Research Fellow in Electrical Engineering at SEAS—are solid.
"Unlike solid metamaterials,
metafluids have the unique ability to flow and adapt to the shape of their
container," said Katia Bertoldi, William and Ami Kuan Danoff Professor of
Applied Mechanics at SEAS and senior author of the paper. "Our goal was to
create a metafluid that not only possesses these remarkable attributes but also
provides a platform for programmable viscosity, compressibility and optical
properties."
Using a highly scalable fabrication
technique developed in the lab of David A. Weitz, Mallinckrodt Professor of
Physics and of Applied Physics at SEAS, the research team produced hundreds of
thousands of these highly-deformable spherical capsules filled with air and
suspended them in silicon oil. When the pressure inside the liquid increases,
the capsules collapse, forming a lens-like half sphere. When that pressure is
removed, the capsules pop back into their spherical shape.
That transition changes many of the
liquid's properties, including its viscosity and opacity. Those properties can
be tuned by changing the number, thickness and size of the capsules in the
liquid.
The researchers demonstrated the
programmability of the liquid by loading the metafluid into a hydraulic robotic
gripper and having the gripper pick up a glass bottle, an egg and a blueberry.
In a traditional hydraulic system powered by simple air or water, the robot
would need some kind of sensing or external control to be able to adjust its
grip and pick up all three objects without crushing them.
But with the metafluid, no sensing
is needed. The liquid itself responds to different pressures, changing its
compliance to adjust the force of the gripper to be able to pick up a heavy
bottle, a delicate egg and a small blueberry, with no additional programming.
"We show that we can use this
fluid to endow intelligence into a simple robot," said Djellouli.
The team also demonstrated a
fluidic logic gate that can be reprogrammed by changing the metafluid.
The metafluid also changes its
optical properties when exposed to changing pressures.
When the capsules are round, they
scatter light, making the liquid opaque, much like air bubbles make aerated
water appear white. But when pressure is applied and the capsules collapse,
they act like microlenses, focusing light and making the liquid transparent.
These optical properties could be used for a range of applications, such
as e-inks that change color based on pressure.
The researchers also showed that
when the capsules are spherical, the metafluid behaves like a Newtonian fluid,
meaning its viscosity only changes in response to temperature. However, when
the capsules are collapsed, the suspension transforms into a non-Newtonian
fluid, meaning that its viscosity will change in response to shear force—the
greater the shear force, the more fluid it becomes. This is the first metafluid
that has been shown to transition between Newtonian and non-Newtonian states.
Next, the researchers aim to
explore the acoustic and thermodynamic properties of the metafluid.
"The application space for
these scalable, easy-to-produce metafluids is huge," said Bertoldi.
Harvard's Office of Technology Development has protected the intellectual property associated with this research and is exploring commercialization opportunities.
by Harvard John A.
Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
Source: Intelligent liquid: Researchers develop metafluid with programmable response (phys.org)
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