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Chemistry

“The Edge Effect: Scientists Uncover Hidden Rules of Nature”

If you’ve ever watched a flock of birds move in perfect unison or seen ripples travel across a pond, you’ve witnessed nature’s remarkable ability to coordinate motion. Recently, a team of scientists and engineers has discovered a similar phenomenon on a microscopic scale, where tiny magnetic particles driven by rotating fields spontaneously move along the edges of clusters driven by invisible ‘edge currents’ that follow the rules of an unexpected branch of physics.

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The human mind is capable of incredible feats – from coordinating complex movements to solving intricate problems. Nature, too, has its own remarkable abilities, such as the synchronization of bird flocks or the propagation of ripples across ponds. Recently, a team of researchers at Rice University discovered a similar phenomenon on a microscopic scale. Their study, published in Physical Review Research, reveals how tiny magnetic particles, driven by rotating fields, spontaneously move along the edges of clusters due to “edge currents” that follow the rules of an unexpected branch of physics – topological physics.

“The initial data was like nothing we’d ever seen before,” said Dr. Evelyn Tang, corresponding author and assistant professor of physics and astronomy. “These were edge flows!” The team’s experiment involved suspending superparamagnetic colloids (tiny magnetic beads) in salty water and applying a rotating magnetic field, which caused the particles to form crystals in different shapes. Sometimes these shapes were dense circular clusters, while others spread out into sheets with empty holes or “voids.”

The experiment got especially interesting when the particles along the outer edges of these shapes started to move faster than the rest, forming a kind of conveyor belt around the border. “We call this edge flow,” said co-first author Aleksandra Nelson, a former postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Tang’s lab. “It is basically a current that forms naturally around the boundary without anyone pushing it.”

To understand why this occurred, the researchers turned to topological physics – a way of describing systems where movement or behavior is controlled by the overall shape or layout rather than the exact details. “Topology is like the highway signs that determines the traffic flow,” said co-author Sibani Lisa Biswal, the William M. McCardell Professor in Chemical Engineering. “Even if there are construction or potholes, the traffic still flows the same way because the route is set by the system’s shape.”

In this case, the “rules” predicted that rotating magnetic particles would generate movement along the edges of whatever shape they formed – whether it was a cluster or a void. And that’s exactly what the team observed under the microscope. Interestingly, the type of motion depended on the shape. When particles formed free-floating clusters, the edge flow caused the whole cluster to spin like a tiny wheel. But when the particles formed larger sheets with voids, the edges still had movement, but the overall structure didn’t rotate.

The ability to control how particles move and organize themselves may seem like a niche discovery, but it has broad implications. Understanding how to direct motion in crowded, dynamic systems could inform the design of responsive materials such as targeted drug delivery, adaptive surfaces or swarms of microbots.

“We’re learning how to control collective behavior using simple physical principles,” said co-first author Dana Lobmeyer, a recent graduate in Dr. Biswal’s lab. “This is a step toward creating materials that can sense their environment and respond intelligently without needing a computer or instructions.”

Although the experiments used synthetic particles, the team sees parallels in biology too. Many cell clusters rotate during development or healing, raising the possibility that similar physical principles are at work inside living organisms.

“This is the beauty of science,” Dr. Tang said. “We’re taking a concept from fundamental math and statistical physics to apply it to everyday materials. It’s a reminder that the same elegant rules can show up right in the lab next door.”

Air Pollution

The Persistent Pollutant: Uncovering the Mystery of Atmospheric Nitrates

A new study details processes that keep pollutants aloft despite a drop in emissions.

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The persistent presence of nitrates in the atmosphere has long been a concern for environmental scientists. Despite efforts to reduce emissions over the past few decades, nitrate levels remain stubbornly high. A recent study published in Nature Communications sheds light on this enigma, revealing that chemical processes within the atmosphere are responsible for the persistence of these pollutants.

The research team led by Hokkaido University’s Professor Yoshinori Iizuka examined nitrate deposition history from 1800 to 2020 in an ice core taken from southeastern Greenland. The results showed a gradual increase in nitrates up to the 1970s, followed by a slower decline after the 1990s. This trend mirrors the changes in emissions of nitrate precursors over the same period.

The study’s findings suggest that factors other than emission reductions are driving the persistence of atmospheric nitrates. The researchers used a global chemical transport model to investigate these factors and discovered that atmospheric acidity is the key culprit. As acidity levels rise, more nitrates become trapped in particulate form, enabling them to persist longer and travel farther.

The implications of this study are significant. Accurate measurements of particulate nitrates in ice cores provide valuable data for refining climate modeling predictions. Moreover, the findings suggest that atmospheric nitrates will soon replace sulfates as the primary aerosol in the Arctic, further amplifying warming in the region.

As Professor Iizuka notes, “Ours is the first study to present accurate information for records of particulate nitrates in ice cores.” The persistence of these pollutants highlights the importance of continued research into atmospheric chemistry and climate modeling. By understanding the complex interactions within our atmosphere, we can better predict and prepare for the challenges that lie ahead.

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Bacteria

A New Hope Against Multidrug Resistance: Synthetic Compound Shows Promise

Researchers have synthesized a new compound called infuzide that shows activity against resistant strains of pathogens.

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The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that antimicrobial resistance causes more than 1 million deaths every year and contributes to over 35 million additional illnesses. Gram-positive pathogens like Staphylococcus aureus and Enterococcus can cause severe hospital-acquired and community-acquired infections, making the development of effective treatments a pressing concern.

Researchers have recently discovered a synthetic compound called infuzide that shows promise against antimicrobial resistant strains of S. aureus and Enterococcus in laboratory and mouse tests. Infuzide was synthesized as part of a decade-long project by interdisciplinary researchers looking for ways to create compounds that could act against pathogens in ways similar to known pharmaceuticals.

“We started the project as a collaboration, looking for ways to synthesize compounds and connecting them with compounds that might have biological activities,” said medicinal chemist Michel Baltas, Ph.D., from the Laboratoire de Chimie de Coordination at the University of Toulouse in France. Baltas co-led the new work, along with Sidharth Chopra, Ph.D., from the CSIR-Central Drug Research Institute in Lucknow, India.

The researchers found that infuzide specifically attacks bacterial cells and is more effective than the standard antibiotic vancomycin in reducing the size of bacterial colonies in lab tests. In tests of resistant S. aureus infections on the skin of mice, the compound effectively reduced the bacterial population, with an even higher reduction when combined with linezolid.

While infuzide did not show significant activity against gram-negative pathogens, the researchers are exploring small changes to expand its antimicrobial activity. The simplicity of the chemical reactions involved in synthesizing infuzide also makes it easy to scale up production for new treatments.

In addition to its potential against multidrug resistance, the group has been investigating the effects of synthesized compounds on other infectious diseases, including tuberculosis. “We have many other candidates to make antimicrobial compounds,” Baltas said.

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Ancient Civilizations

Reviving an Ancient Hue: Researchers Recreate Egyptian Blue Pigment

Researchers have recreated the world’s oldest synthetic pigment, called Egyptian blue, which was used in ancient Egypt about 5,000 years ago.

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The world’s oldest synthetic pigment, Egyptian blue, has been recreated by a team of researchers from Washington State University. This breakthrough, published in the journal NPJ Heritage Science, provides valuable insights for archaeologists and conservation scientists studying ancient Egyptian materials.

Led by John McCloy, director of WSU’s School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, the research team collaborated with the Carnegie Museum of Natural History and the Smithsonian’s Museum Conservation Institute to develop 12 recipes for the pigment. These recipes utilized a variety of raw materials and heating times, replicating temperatures available to ancient artists.

Egyptian blue was highly valued in ancient times due to its unique properties and versatility. It was used as a substitute for expensive minerals like turquoise or lapis lazuli and applied to wood, stone, and cartonnage – a papier-mâché-type material. Depending on its ingredients and processing time, the pigment’s color ranged from deep blue to dull gray or green.

The researchers’ work aimed to highlight how modern science can reveal hidden stories in ancient Egyptian objects. After the Egyptians, the pigment was used by Romans, but by the Renaissance period, the knowledge of how it was made had largely been forgotten.

In recent years, there has been a resurgence of interest in Egyptian blue due to its intriguing properties and potential new technological applications. The pigment emits light in the near-infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum, which people can’t see, making it suitable for fingerprinting and counterfeit-proof inks. It also shares similar chemistry with high-temperature superconductors.

To understand the makeup of Egyptian blue, the researchers created 12 different recipes using mixtures of silicon dioxide, copper, calcium, and sodium carbonate. They heated the material at around 1000 degrees Celsius for between one and 11 hours to replicate temperatures available to ancient artists. After cooling the samples at various rates, they studied the pigments using modern microscopy and analysis techniques that had never been used for this type of research.

The researchers found that Egyptian blue is highly heterogeneous, with different people making the pigment and transporting it to final uses elsewhere. Small differences in the process resulted in very different outcomes. In fact, to get the bluest color required only about 50% of the blue-colored components, regardless of the rest of the mixture’s composition.

The samples created are currently on display at Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and will become part of the museum’s new long-term gallery focused on ancient Egypt. This research serves as a prime example of how science can shed light on our human past, revealing hidden stories in ancient objects and materials.

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