Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
August 2024
To test the hypothesis that an abiotic Earth and its inert atmosphere could form chemically reactive carbon- and nitrogen-containing compounds, we designed a plasma electrochemical setup to mimic lightning-induced electrochemistry under steady-state conditions of the early Earth. Air-gap electrochemical reactions at air-water-ground interfaces lead to remarkable yields, with up to 40 moles of carbon dioxide being reduced into carbon monoxide and formic acid, and 3 moles of gaseous nitrogen being fixed into nitrate, nitrite, and ammonium ions, per mole of transmitted electrons. Interfaces enable reactants (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe question of melting has been addressed theoretically and experimentally for two-dimensional crystals in thermal equilibrium. However, as it pertains to out-of-equilibrium systems, the question is unresolved. Here, we present a platform to study the melting of a two-dimensional, binary Coulombic crystal composed of equal numbers of nylon and polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) beads that measure a couple of millimeters in diameter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper describes measurements of charge transport by tunneling through molecular junctions comprising a self-assembled monolayer (SAM) supported by a template-stripped metal bottom electrode (M), which has been immersed in an organic liquid and contacted by a conical GaO/EGaIn top electrode. These junctions formed in organic liquids are robust; they show stabilities and yields similar to those formed in air. We formed junctions under seven external environments: (I) air, (II) perfluorocarbons, (III) linear hydrocarbons, (IV) cyclic hydrocarbons, (V) aromatic compounds, (VI) large, irregularly shaped hydrocarbons, and (VII) dimethyl siloxanes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn soft devices, complex actuation sequences and precise force control typically require hard electronic valves and microcontrollers. Existing designs for entirely soft pneumatic control systems are capable of either digital or analog operation, but not both, and are limited by speed of actuation, range of pressure, time required for fabrication, or loss of power through pull-down resistors. Using the nonlinear mechanics intrinsic to structures composed of soft materials-in this case, by leveraging membrane inversion and tube kinking-two modular soft components are developed: a piston actuator and a bistable pneumatic switch.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe problem this paper addresses is the origin of the hysteretic behavior in two-terminal molecular junctions made from an EGaIn electrode and self-assembled monolayers of alkanethiolates terminated in chelates (transition metal dichlorides complexed with 2,2'-bipyridine; BIPY-MCl). The hysteresis of conductance displayed by these BIPY-MCl junctions changes in magnitude depending on the identity of the metal ion (M) and the window of the applied voltage across the junction. The hysteretic behavior of conductance in these junctions appears only in an incoherent (Fowler-Nordheim) tunneling regime.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis review focuses on experimental work on nonlinear phenomena in microfluidics, which for the most part are phenomena for which the velocity of a fluid flowing through a microfluidic channel does not scale proportionately with the pressure drop. Examples include oscillations, flow-switching behaviors, and bifurcations. These phenomena are qualitatively distinct from laminar, diffusion-limited flows that are often associated with microfluidics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLocomotion of soft robots typically relies on control of multiple inflatable actuators by electronic computers and hard valves. Soft pneumatic oscillators can reduce the demand on controllers by generating complex movements required for locomotion from a single, constant input pressure, but either have been constrained to low rates of flow of air or have required complex fabrication processes. Here, we describe a pneumatic oscillator fabricated from flexible, but inextensible, sheets that provides high rates of airflow for practical locomotion by combining three instabilities: out-of-plane buckling of the sheets, kinking of tubing attached to the sheets, and a system-level instability resulting from connection of an odd number of pneumatic inverters made from these sheets in a loop.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis perspective considers ways in which the field of microfluidics can increase its impact by improving existing technologies and enabling new functionalities. We highlight applications where microfluidics has made or can make important contributions, including diagnostics, food safety, and the production of materials. The success of microfluidics assumes several forms, including fundamental innovations in fluid mechanics that enable the precise manipulation of fluids at small scales and the development of portable microfluidic chips for commercial purposes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe rapidly increasing use of digital technologies requires the rethinking of methods to store data. This work shows that digital data can be stored in mixtures of fluorescent dye molecules, which are deposited on a surface by inkjet printing, where an amide bond tethers the dye molecules to the surface. A microscope equipped with a multichannel fluorescence detector distinguishes individual dyes in the mixture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper describes a surface analysis technique that uses the "EGaIn junction" to measure tunneling current densities ((V), amps/cm) through self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) terminated in a chelating group and incorporating different transition metal ions. Comparisons of (V) measurements between bare chelating groups and chelates are used to characterize the composition of the SAM and infer the dissociation constant (, mol/L), as well as kinetic rate constants ( L/mols; 1/s) of the reversible chelate-metal reaction. To demonstrate the concept, SAMs of 11-(4-methyl-2,2'-bipyrid-4'-yl (bpy))undecanethiol (HS(CH)bpy) were incubated within ethanol solutions of metal salts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper demonstrates that the molecular conformation (in addition to the composition and structure) of molecules making up self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) influences the rates of charge tunneling (CT) through them, in molecular junctions of the form Au/S(CH)CONRR//GaO/EGaIn, where R and R are alkyl chains of different length. The lengths of chains R and R were selected to influence the conformations and conformational homogeneity of the molecules in the monolayer. The conformations of the molecules influence the thickness of the monolayer (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLocomotion of an organism interacting with an environment is the consequence of a symmetry-breaking action in space-time. Here we show a minimal instantiation of this principle using a thin circular sheet, actuated symmetrically by a pneumatic source, using pressure to change shape nonlinearly via a spontaneous buckling instability. This leads to a polarized, bilaterally symmetric cone that can walk on land and swim in water.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper addresses the mechanism for rectification in molecular tunneling junctions based on alkanethiolates terminated by a bipyridine group complexed with a metal ion, that is, having the structure Au-S(CH)BIPY-MCl (where M = Co or Cu) with a eutectic indium-gallium alloy top contact (EGaIn, 75.5% Ga 24.5% In).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagneto-Archimedes levitation (MagLev) enables the separation of powdered mixtures of illicit drugs (cocaine, methamphetamine, heroin, fentanyl, and its analogues), adulterants, and diluents based on density, and allows the presumptive identification of individual components. Small samples (mass <50 mg), with low concentrations of illicit drugs, present a particular challenge to analysis for forensic chemists. The MagLev device, a cuvette containing a solution of paramagnetic gadolinium(III) chelate in a non-polar solvent, placed between two like-poles-facing NdFeB magnets, allowed separation of seven relevant compounds simultaneously.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeriodic actuation of multiple soft, pneumatic actuators requires coordinated function of multiple, separate components. This work demonstrates a soft, pneumatic ring oscillator that induces temporally coordinated periodic motion in soft actuators using a single, constant-pressure source, without hard valves or electronic controls. The fundamental unit of this ring oscillator is a soft, pneumatic inverter (an inverting Schmitt trigger) that switches between its two states ("on" and "off") using two instabilities in elastomeric structures: buckling of internal tubing and snap-through of a hemispherical membrane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
October 2020
All matter has density. The recorded uses of density to characterize matter date back to as early as ca. 250 BC, when Archimedes was believed to have solved "The Puzzle of The King's Crown" using density.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough information is ubiquitous, and its technology arguably among the highest that humankind has produced, its very ubiquity has posed new types of problems. Three that involve storage of information (rather than computation) include its usage of energy, the robustness of stored information over long times, and its ability to resist corruption through tampering. The difficulty in solving these problems using present methods has stimulated interest in the possibilities available through fundamentally different strategies, including storage of information in molecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHabitat spatial structure has a profound influence on bacterial life, yet there currently are no low-cost equipment-free laboratory techniques to reproduce the intricate structure of natural bacterial habitats. Here, we demonstrate the use of paper scaffolds to create landscapes spatially structured at the scales relevant to bacterial ecology. In paper scaffolds, planktonic bacteria migrate through liquid-filled pores, while the paper's cellulose fibres serve as anchor points for sessile colonies (biofilms).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis Article describes the relationship between molecular structure, and the rectification of tunneling current, in tunneling junctions based on self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). Molecular dipoles from simple organic functional groups (amide, urea, and thiourea) were introduced into junctions with the structure Ag/S(CH) R(CH) CH//GaO/EGaIn. Here, R is an n-alkyl fragment (-CH-), an amide group (either -CONH- or -NHCO-), a urea group (-NHCONH-), or a thiourea group (-NHCSNH-).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHow simple chemical reactions self-assembled into complex, robust networks at the origin of life is unknown. This general problem-self-assembly of dissipative molecular networks-is also important in understanding the growth of complexity from simplicity in molecular and biomolecular systems. Here, we describe how heterogeneity in the composition of a small network of oscillatory organic reactions can sustain (rather than stop) these oscillations, when homogeneity in their composition does not.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe nature of the processes at the origin of life that selected specific classes of molecules for broad incorporation into cells is controversial. Among those classes selected were polyisoprenoids and their derivatives. This paper tests the hypothesis that polyisoprenoids were early contributors to membranes in part because they (or their derivatives) could facilitate charge transport by quantum tunneling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough soft devices (grippers, actuators, and elementary robots) are rapidly becoming an integral part of the broad field of robotics, autonomy for completely soft devices has only begun to be developed. Adaptation of conventional systems of control to soft devices requires hard valves and electronic controls. This paper describes completely soft pneumatic digital logic gates having a physical scale appropriate for use with current (macroscopic) soft actuators.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBilirubin is predominantly formed in the liver as a result of breakdown of hemoglobin. Knowing the concentration of bilirubin in serum is important in evaluating the health of the liver, and for the diagnosis of hyperbilirubinemia (a condition that afflicts approximately 60% of full-term and 80% of pre-term newborns). This paper describes the design and fabrication of a potentiometric sensor for the determination of free bilirubin in serum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis work describes the development of magnetic levitation (MagLev) using ring magnets and a configuration (which we call "axial MagLev") to remove the physical barriers to physical sampling in the magnetic field present in "standard MagLev" and to simplify the procedures used to carry out density-based analyses, separations, and manipulations. The optimized, linear magnetic field generated between the two ring magnets (coaxially aligned and like-poles facing) enables the levitation of diamagnetic (and weakly paramagnetic, e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper describes experiments that are designed to test the influence of terminal groups incorporating carbon-halogen bonds on the current density (by hole tunneling) across self-assembled monolayer (SAM)-based junctions of the form M/S(CH)NHCOCH X//GaO/EGaIn (where M = Ag and Au and X = CH, F, Cl, Br, I). Within the limits of statistical significance, these rates of tunneling are insensitive to the nature of the terminal group at the interface between the SAM and the GaO. The results are relevant to the origin of an apparent inconsistency in the literature concerning the influence of halogen atoms at the SAM//electrode interface on the tunneling current density.
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