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Saturn's miniatures versions created by electrifying tiny droplets of fluids

Miniatures Versions Of Saturn With Rings Have Been Created By Scientists Who Made Them By Electrifying Tiny Droplets Of Fluids. This Advance May Pave The Way For Creating Microscopic And Uniform Particles And Capsules That Are Often Used In Products Such As Drugs, Inks, Cosmetics And Paints.

News Nation Bureau | Edited By : Bindiya Bhatt | Updated on: 11 Jul 2017, 07:51:26 PM
Saturn's miniatures versions created from charged liquid droplets

New Delhi:

Miniatures versions of Saturn with rings have been created by scientists who made them by electrifying tiny droplets of fluids. This advance may pave the way for creating microscopic and uniform particles and capsules that are often used in products such as drugs, inks, cosmetics and paints.

The droplet responds by forming two electrically charged poles when a drop of electrically conductive liquid is exposed to an electric field.

These poles can get pulled towards the sources of the electric field, taking on cone shapes, previous research has shown. The tips of the cones can spray jets of droplets, if the pull is strong enough.

Experiments regarding this effect, known as electrospraying, often involved drops of liquid surrounded by less electrically conductive fluids.

Researchers from Northwestern University in the US, and colleagues wanted to explore what happens when drops of liquid are submerged in more electrically conductive fluids -specifically, drops of silicone oil suspended in castor oil.

When an electric field is applied to a drop of silicone oil suspended in castor oil, the drop can flatten and emit rings of fluid from its equator that break up into droplets.

If an electric field is strong enough, researchers found that the equators of these squashed drops emit concentric rings of droplets, making the drops look like miniature versions of Saturn.

In experiments, drops of silicone oil about one millimetre wide generated droplets that were about 100 times smaller, Petia Vlahovska from Northwestern University told ‘Live Science’. Vlahovska noted they could generate rings in a very controllable way. Future research will explore what materials can be used to produce this “ring of particles” effect.

“The broader the range of materials, the wider the applications will be,” Vlahovska said. The findings will be published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

(With inputs from PTI)

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First Published : 11 Jul 2017, 07:48:00 PM

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