Science Scientists Have Created Programmable Shape-Shifting Liquid Metal

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http://www.scienceinsanity.com/2019...d1Rre4v7WRJXi0v5uzw6lEdQpgE6x3RRO58SWDtac&m=1


Researchers at the University of Sussex and Swansea University have applied electrical charges to manipulate liquid metal into 2D shapes such as letters and a heart. The team says the findings represent an “extremely promising” new class of materials that can be programmed to seamlessly change shape. This open up new possibilities in ‘soft robotics’ and shape-changing displays, the researcher say.


While the invention might bring to mind the film Terminator 2, in which the villain morphs out of a pool of liquid metal, the creation of 3D shapes is still some way off. More immediate applications could include reprogrammable circuit boards and conductive ink.

Yutaka Tokuda, the Research Associate working on this project at the University of Sussex, says:
“This is a new class of programmable materials in a liquid state which can dynamically transform from a simple droplet shape to many other complex geometry in a controllable manner. While this work is in its early stages, the compelling evidence of detailed 2D control of liquid metals excites us to explore more potential applications in computer graphics, smart electronics, soft robotics and flexible displays.”

The electric fields used to shape the liquid are created by a computer, meaning that the position and shape of the liquid metal can be programmed and controlled dynamically.


Professor Sriram Subramanian, head of the INTERACT Lab at the University of Sussex, said:
“Liquid metals are an extremely promising class of materials for deformable applications; their unique properties include voltage-controlled surface tension, high liquid-state conductivity and liquid-solid phase transition at room temperature. One of the long-term visions of us and many other researchers is to change the physical shape, appearance and functionality of any object through digital control to create intelligent, dexterous and useful objects that exceed the functionality of any current display or robot.”

The research is being has been presented at the ACM Interactive Surfaces and Spaces 2017 conference in Brighton. This is a joint project between Sussex and Swansea funded by EPSRC on “Breaking the Glass: Multimodal, Malleable Interactive Mobile surfaces for Hands-In Interactions”.
 
I guarantee in 5 years that will appear in a Snapchat news article saying how satisfying it is.
 
it's about ethics in mimetic polyalloy construction
 
So Interface by UMAMI but in real life, and with liquid metal instead of cerebral electricity.
 
If they start building 3D models of Robert Patrick's head, ready the nukes.
 
This could lead to alterable circuit boards and data storage. Imagine the implications for cybersecurity if you can just tell your ssd drive to rearrange itself.
 
This could lead to alterable circuit boards and data storage. Imagine the implications for cybersecurity if you can just tell your ssd drive to rearrange itself.
Also, the possibilities for self-healing circuitry are interesting to ponder.
 
Also, the possibilities for self-healing circuitry are interesting to ponder.
Could you use this stuff to 'harden' circuitry against EMP? That'd be a hell of a paradigm shift. EMP's been the big bugaboo for a while for any first-world, high tech country; eliminating it as an effective weapon would be a neat thing.
 
Could you use this stuff to 'harden' circuitry against EMP? That'd be a hell of a paradigm shift. EMP's been the big bugaboo for a while for any first-world, high tech country; eliminating it as an effective weapon would be a neat thing.
That really depends on whether the toolset you need to program this stuff remains operable after an attack, I would think.
 
Could you use this stuff to 'harden' circuitry against EMP? That'd be a hell of a paradigm shift. EMP's been the big bugaboo for a while for any first-world, high tech country; eliminating it as an effective weapon would be a neat thing.
I don't see how this would be any more resistant. A large enough current (induced by the EMP) to fry the copper traces off a circuit board would fry all the sensitive chips and probably that liquid metal too.
 
One small step from God,

One giant leap to her.

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That really depends on whether the toolset you need to program this stuff remains operable after an attack, I would think.

I don't see how this would be any more resistant. A large enough current (induced by the EMP) to fry the copper traces off a circuit board would fry all the sensitive chips and probably that liquid metal too.
I had a thought.

The EMP probably would wreck the circuitry as is, but in theory (yeah, I know)... what if you had a shielded reservoir of this stuff, preprogrammed to repair the circuitry?

Even if it was only a kludge job or temporary fix it might work.
 
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