Chemical Robotics
Droplets are simple spheres of fluid, not normally considered capable of doing anything on their own. But now researchers have made droplets of alcohol move through water. In the future, such moving droplets may deliver medicine and more. |
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To be able to move on your own – to be self-moving – is a feature normally seen in living organisms. But also non-living entities can be self-moving, report researchers from University of Southern Denmark and Institute of Chemical Technology in Prague, Czech Republic.
The researchers have made alcohol droplets move in a life-like way, and this could lead to interesting new technology, they say.
The video above shows an alcohol droplet find its way through a maze, guided by a salt concentration.
“The system itself is very simple but yet it displays sophisticated behavior”, explains principal investigator Martin Hanczyc, who was at Center for Fundamental Living Technology (FLINT), University of Southern Denmark, when the research was done.
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Hanczyc and his colleagues from Prague have shown that small droplets of alcohol in water can move through complex mazes. The droplets can be led to certain targets, and therefore they may be used as a technology to physically move chemistry to a place where it is desired.
“For example, the droplet can act either as a lubricant, targeting an area that needs lubrication. Or the droplet can act as a carrier for chemistry that can find a target destination and release its content, such as flavoring, medicine etc.,”Hanczyc explains.
The key to the movement is salt. The droplets start to move when they sense salt in their environment.
"The droplet can act as a carrier for chemistry that can find a target destination and release its content, such as flavoring, medicine etc." |
The system is sustainable in that the same droplet can migrate towards salts at different positions added sequentially. In addition the droplet can distinguish between salt sources of different concentration. The process can also be controlled by external temperature stimulus, and when the droplet arrives at the source it can physically fuse with it and react with it.
Hanczyc has previously reported that oil droplets display a life-like moving behavior and may be a simple chemical predecessor to biological life.
SOURCE University of Southern Denmark
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