• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

The First Known Piezoelectric Liquids Have Been Discovered

March 30, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Over 140 years after piezoelectricity was discovered, the first piezoelectric liquids have now been found by chance. Not only could they outperform solid piezoelectric materials in some existing uses, but they may also open up entirely new applications we’re yet to imagine.

Some crystals and other materials accumulate electric charge when pushed, a phenomenon known as piezoelectricity. Even proteins and DNA display this trait. Piezoelectric materials get a burst of publicity every few years, for example, shoes that generate electricity from steps. Showy and fun as such projects are, any claims to being a useful replacement for fossil fuels have not come close to being realized. On the other hand, piezoelectric materials are the basis of cigarette and gas stove lighters and are widely used in sensing devices.

Advertisement

Ever since their discovery, however, all piezoelectric materials have been solid. Now, a paper has announced the finding of two liquids that display the same behavior, along with a unique twist.

The discovery came out of experiments by Professor Gary Blanchard and graduate student Md Iqbal Hossain of Michigan State University on room-temperature ionic liquids, a type of liquid salt. Sodium chloride melts at 801° C (1,474° F), and most other familiar salts stay solid to similarly high temperatures – molten salt storage of solar thermal energy requires a lot of heat to get started. Ionic liquids consist of much larger ions than those in familiar salts, and these fail to pack together into neat lattices and therefore need far less energy to melt.

Although the first ionic liquids were found almost as long ago as the piezoelectric effect, until recently, they were considered just a curiosity. As the need to store solar and wind energy has become acute, ionic liquids have attracted renewed attention. An initially highly reactive class of liquids has also been made safer.

The authors were using a piston to squeeze two commercially available ionic liquids with names only an organic chemist could love – 1-butyl-3-methyl imidazolium bis(trifluoromethyl-sulfonyl)imide and 1-hexyl-3-methyl imidazolium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide – when they discovered the process generated electricity. “It shocked the hell out of us to see that,” Blanchard said in a statement. “Nobody had ever seen the piezoelectric effect in liquids before.”

Advertisement

Piezoelectric materials also change shape when exposed to electric fields, known as the converse piezoelectric effect. The liquids have what may be an equivalent behavior. The team found that passing an electric current through either liquid produced a dramatic change in optical properties.

When the fluids are placed in a container shaped like a lens, they bend light differently depending on electric charge, which Blanchard said, changes “the focal length of the lens.”

This creates the potential to make telescopes or cameras with widely flexible optical properties, just by adjusting a small current.

There are almost certainly abundant other applications no one has yet thought of, but the first uses could be to replace piezoelectric solids in cases where these have proven hard to manufacture.

Advertisement

One advantage of ionic liquids over solids is that the ones on which the discovery was made are recyclable and not considered hazardous to the environment. This contrasts with piezoelectric solids, many of which contain heavy metals such as lead. On the other hand, the effect Blanchard observed is weak – about a tenth of that in quartz – so other liquids may be needed.

“We’re still in the middle of trying to figure out the fundamental mechanisms underlying how piezoelectricity can occur in liquids,” Blanchard said. The working hypothesis is that the pressure makes positive and negative charges separate.

The discovery is published in The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters. 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soccer – Late goal gives Uruguay 1-0 win over Ecuador
  2. France’s Le Drian says restoring confidence with U.S. will require time
  3. Mail-in delays and recounts: Canada’s election tallying drags on
  4. Analysis-Russia’s Gazprom feels the heat over Europe’s red-hot gas prices

Source Link: The First Known Piezoelectric Liquids Have Been Discovered

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • The First American To Fly Into Space Had To Pee In His Space Suit
  • The Biggest Chemical Cover-Up In History Was Kept Hidden For Years
  • Can You Hear Electricity?
  • Newest Member Of The Solar System Just Announced, Capuchins Have Started Stealing Baby Howler Monkeys, And Much More This Week
  • Capuchin Kidnappers, Spinosaurus Daddy, And A New Member Of The Solar System
  • Plastic Rocks Are A “New And Terrifying” Phenomenon Coming To A Shore Near You
  • “We Also Tried Remote Control Cars Dressed As Females”: How Scientists Took On Rare Kākāpō Artificial Insemination
  • “Missing Americans”: US Excess Deaths Still Above Pre-COVID Levels, Upwards Of 1 Million
  • Clever Hawk Spotted Using Pedestrian Crossing To Catch Prey In New Jersey
  • There’s A Bold And Controversial Theory That Jesus Was A Hallucinogenic Mushroom
  • You Don’t Have 5 Senses, You Have Way More Than That
  • Space Oddity: The Atmosphere Of Titan Spins In A Different Way From The Saturnian Moon
  • Hummingbirds Have Rapidly Evolved In California Over The Past Century
  • The Moon’s Mysterious Magnetic Rocks Might Have A Cataclysmic Explanation
  • The Earth’s Core Is Leaking. The Result: More Gold
  • Over 40 Percent Of Kids In A US Study Thought Bacon Was A Plant
  • Fossil Mystery Reveals New Species Of 85-Million-Year-Old Sea Monster, And It’s “Very Odd”
  • Can’t Handle The Heat? A Potential “Anti-Spice” Could Tame Spicy Food
  • We Now Know When Denisovans, Neanderthals, And Modern Humans Inhabited Denisova Cave
  • Tailless Alligator Shocks Passersby On Highway In Southern Louisiana
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version