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'Smart' Fluid Controlled With Light

Date:
March 21, 2007
Source:
University Of Maryland, A. James Clark School Of Engineering
Summary:
Members of the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering's Complex Fluids and Nanomaterials Group, lead by Assistant Professor Srinivasa Raghavan, have discovered a new class of "smart fluids" capable of switching from gel to liquid upon exposure to ultraviolet light.
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Members of the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering's Complex Fluids and Nanomaterials Group, lead by Assistant Professor Srinivasa Raghavan, have discovered a new class of "smart fluids" capable of switching from gel to liquid upon exposure to ultraviolet light.

A paper detailing the group's findings, titled "A simple class of photorheological fluids: Surfactant solutions with viscosity tunable by light," was recently published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society (2007; 129(6) pp 1553 – 1559). The paper was authored by graduate students Aimee M. Ketner and Rakesh Kumar, alumnus Tanner S. Davies, undergraduate Patrick W. Elder, and professor Raghavan. It is already generating interest in the scientific community, most recently being discussed by Nature magazine’s materials@nature website, Chemical Processing magazine, Materials Today, and ScienceDaily.

Fluids capable of a state-change in response to electric fields (electrorheological, ER), magnetic fields (magnetoreheological, MR), and light (photorheological, PR) change instantly from liquids into semi-solids or gels, then back again as the stimulus is applied or removed. ER- and MR-based smart fluids are already in wide use in devices such as shock absorbers for vehicles and buildings, valves and clutches, but their light-triggered cousins have so far remained largely ignored by industry because they are typically difficult and expensive to manufacture.

The Raghavan group, however, has engineered new kinds of PR fluids that can be created using inexpensive chemicals found in most labs. The researchers believe that their discovery could spur on the acceptance and use of PR fluids in commercial applications, particularly in microscale devices such as microvalves or microsensors, where light will be more effective than electrical or magnetic fields for precision control.

The group’s smart fluids contain micelles, strings of molecules that spontaneously form in water under the right conditions. Initially, the micelles are long, wormlike chains that tend to get entangled, much like a bowl of spaghetti, making the fluid thick and gel-like. Upon exposure to UV radiation, the micelles’ length is drastically reduced due to rearrangements of their constituent molecules. The shortened micelles become untangled, and the smart fluid becomes a thin, water-like liquid, with a viscosity (thickness) that is reduced by 4 orders of magnitude (a factor of 10,000).

The Complex Fluids and Nanomaterials Group’s work on this project was funded by a seed grant from the Small Smart Systems Center (SSSC) at the University of Maryland and a CAREER award from the NSF-CTS.


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Materials provided by University Of Maryland, A. James Clark School Of Engineering. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Cite This Page:

University Of Maryland, A. James Clark School Of Engineering. "'Smart' Fluid Controlled With Light." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 21 March 2007. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/03/070320130532.htm>.
University Of Maryland, A. James Clark School Of Engineering. (2007, March 21). 'Smart' Fluid Controlled With Light. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 29, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/03/070320130532.htm
University Of Maryland, A. James Clark School Of Engineering. "'Smart' Fluid Controlled With Light." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/03/070320130532.htm (accessed March 29, 2024).

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