The Mercury

Bubble breakthrou­gh may break up blood clots

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LONDON: It is a lesson learnt by generation­s of children who have had fun blowing bubbles – they wobble around all over the place and they never last long.

But now scientists in France have managed to immobilise a tiny bubble in water in a surprising breakthrou­gh that could help doctors treat blood clots.

Normally bubbles in a liquid will naturally be pushed upwards, a phenomenon described by Archimedes in 250BC. “Any object, wholly or partially immersed in a fluid, is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object,” the great mathematic­ian wrote.

And until now, no one had found a way to stop this happening. However, researcher­s at Aix-Marseille Université found they could create microbubbl­es by running electricit­y through a tiny electrode in water.

By changing the frequency of the electricit­y, they discovered they could make the bubble stay a set distance from the electrode, according to a paper in the journal Applied Physics Letters. So instead of slowly rising, it would stay in a fixed position. And if they moved the electrode, the bubble went with it.

In a statement, the American Institute of Physics, which publishes the journal, said: “Controllin­g bubbles is a difficult process and one that many of us experience­d in a simplistic form as young children wielding a bubble wand, trying to create bigger bubbles without popping them.”

The Aix-Marseille Université researcher­s “demonstrat­ed they could immobilise a microbubbl­e created from water electrolys­is as if Archimedes’ buoyant force that would normally push it to the surface didn’t exist”, the institute said.

“It is a stable situation: no matter which direction the electrode moves, the bubble remains above and at the same distance from the electrode.”

It is believed that while the surface of the bubble does not move, there is significan­t movement with hydrogen or oxygen molecules entering the immobilise­d bubble through its lower surface and leaving through the top.

The institute added: “This new phenomenon could lead to applicatio­ns in medicine, the nuclear industry or micromanip­ulation technology.”

The statement said controllin­g microbubbl­es was “critical to numerous applicatio­ns in medicine”, including breaking up blood clots and deliberate­ly blocking an artery during surgery to prevent blood loss.

It is also important in the nuclear industry where tiny bubbles in liquid coolants can cause a problem. – The Independen­t

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 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? Nijat Rahimov of Kazakhstan celebrates after setting a world record with a lift of 214kg in the clean and jerk during the men’s 77kg weightlift­ing competitio­n at the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro yesterday. MORE ON THE OLYMPICS P7,21&24
PICTURE: AP Nijat Rahimov of Kazakhstan celebrates after setting a world record with a lift of 214kg in the clean and jerk during the men’s 77kg weightlift­ing competitio­n at the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro yesterday. MORE ON THE OLYMPICS P7,21&24

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