At the atomic level, a glass of water and a spoonful of crystalline salt couldn’t be more different. Water atoms move around freely and randomly, while salt crystals are locked in place in a lattice. But some new materials show an intriguing propensity to sometimes behave like water and sometimes like salt, giving them interesting transport properties and holding potential promise for applications like mixing and delivery in the pharmaceutical industry.
These so-called active materials contain small magnetic particles that self-organize into short chains of particles, or spinners, and form a lattice-like structure when a magnetic field is applied. Active materials need an external energy source to maintain their structure. Unlike in previous experiments involving active materials, which looked at particles that demonstrated linear motion, the new spinners acquire a handedness — like right- or left-handedness — that causes them to rotate in a specific direction.
This twirling rotation of the suspended self-assembled nickel spinners creates a whirlpool-like effect in which different particles can get sucked into the vortices created by their neighbors. As the particles start to come together, the whirlpools created by the spinning motion — in conjunction with the magnetic interactions — pull them even closer, creating a fixed crystalline-like material, even as the spinners still rotate.
Researchers investigated how a non-spinner particle would be transported through the active lattice. The rapid whirling of the spinners creates the ability for these other cargo particles to move through the lattice much more quickly than they would through a normal material. In regular diffusion, the process of getting a particle from one side of the material to the other is temperature-dependent and takes a much longer period of time.
The transport of a non-spinner particle is also dependent upon the spacing between the spinners. If the spinners are located sufficiently far apart, the non-spinner particle will travel chaotically between different spinners, like a raft traveling down a series of whitewater rapids. If the particles in the lattice come closer together, the non-spinner particle can become trapped in an individual cell of the lattice. Once the particle comes within a cell through its own chaotic motion, the field can be modified so that the lattice slightly shrinks, making the probability of the particle to leave that location in the lattice very low.
The material also showed the ability to undergo self-repair, similar to a biological tissue. When the researchers made a hole in the lattice, the lattice reformed. By looking at systems with purely rotational motion, the researchers believe that they can design systems with specific transport characteristics.
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