The Asian Age

‘ Terminator- style’ liquid metal heartbeat created

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Melbourne: Inspired by science fiction, researcher­s have created a “heartbeat” effect in liquid metal, causing the metal to pulse rhythmical­ly in a manner similar to a beating heart. The researcher­s from the University of Wollongong ( UOW) in Australia produced the heartbeat by electroche­mically stimulatin­g a drop of liquid gallium, causing it to oscillate in a regular and predictabl­e manner. Gallium ( Ga) is a soft silvery metal with a low melting point, becoming liquid at temperatur­es greater than 29.7 degrees Celsius. The finding, published in the journal Physical Review Letters, has potential applicatio­ns for fluid- based timers and actuators in artificial muscles, soft robotics and "lab- on- a- chip" microfluid­ic circuitry. “By designing a special electrode and applying voltage to drops of liquid metal we were able to make the metal move like a beating heart,” said Xiaolin Wang, a professor at the University of Wollongong. While similar heartbeat effects have been created previously in liquid mercury, this produces an erratic motion that is difficult to deactivate or control. Mercury has the added disadvanta­ge of being highly toxic. Liquid gallium, by contrast, is non- toxic and produces a regular motion, making it potentiall­y of far greater use, researcher­s said. Wang said the research was inspired by biological systems and in part by science fiction, including the shape- shifting, liquid metal “T- 1000” robot in the film Terminator 2: Judgement Day. “To me, nothing is fiction — science fiction is a science fact that has not been discovered yet. When I see an effect in science fiction I think about how we can create,” he said. “I don't want to create a Terminator robot, don't worry, but the functional­ity of the liquid robot can be useful in the real world,” said Wang.

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