New Understanding of How Shape and Form Develop In Nature

Morphogenesis: Credit: Stoyan Smoukov
Researchers have developed a new method for generating complex shapes, and have found that the development of form in nature can be driven by the physical properties of materials themselves, in contrast with earlier findings. The results, reported in the journal Nature, could enable the construction of complex structures from simple components, with potential applications in pharmaceuticals, paints, cosmetics and household products such as shampoo. Using a simple set-up -- essentially droplets of oil in a soapy water solution which were slowly frozen -- the researchers found that recently-discovered 'plastic crystal' phases formed on the inside surfaces of the droplets cause them to shape-shift into a wide variety of forms, from octahedrons and hexagons to triangles and fibres. Previous efforts to create such complex shapes and structures have used top-down processing methods, which allow a high degree of control, but are not efficient in terms of the amount of material used or the expensive equipment necessary to make the shapes. The new method, developed by researchers from the University of Cambridge and Sofia University in Bulgaria, uses a highly efficient, extremely simple bottom-up approach to create complex shapes. "There are many ways that non-biological things take shape," said Dr Stoyan Smoukov from Cambridge's Department of Materials Science & Metallurgy, who led the research. "But the question is what drives the process and how to control it -- and what are the links between the process in the biological and the non-biological world?" Smoukov's research proposes a possible answer to the question of what drives this process, called morphogenesis. In animals, morphogenesis controls the distribution of cells during embryonic development, and can also be seen in mature animals, such as in a growing tumour. In the 1950s, the codebreaker and mathematician Alan Turing proposed that morphogenesis is driven by reaction-diffusion, in which local chemical reactions cause a substance to spread through a space. More recent research, from Smoukov's group and others, has proposed that it is physical properties of materials that control the process. This possibility had been anticipated by Turing, but it was impossible to determine using the computers of the time. What this most recent research has found is that by slowly freezing oil droplets in a soapy solution, the droplets will shape-shift through a variety of different forms, and can shift back to their original shape if the solution is re-warmed. Further observation found that this process is driven by the self-assembly of a plastic crystal phase which forms beneath the surface of the droplets. "Plastic crystals are a special state of matter that is like the alter ego of the liquid crystals used in many TV screens," said Smoukov. Both liquid crystals and plastic crystals can be thought of as transitional stages between liquid and solid. While liquid crystals point their molecules in defined directions like a crystal, they have no long-range order and flow like a liquid. Plastic crystals are wax-like with long-range order in their molecular arrangement, but disorder in the orientation of each molecule. The orientational disorder makes plastic crystals highly deformable, and as they change shape, the droplets change shape along with them. "This plastic crystal phase seems to be what's causing the droplets to change shape, or break their symmetry," said Smoukov. "And in order to understand morphogenesis, it's vital that we understand what causes symmetry breaking." The researchers found that by altering the size of the droplets they started with or the rate that the temperature of the soapy solution was lowered, they were able to control the sequence of the shapes the droplets ended up forming. This degree of control could be useful for multiple applications -- from pharmaceuticals to household goods -- that use small-droplet emulsions. "The plastic crystal phase has been of intense scientific interest recently, but no one so far has been able to harness it to exert forces or show this variety of shape-changes," said the paper's lead author Professor Nikolai Denkov of Sofia University, who first proposed the general explanation of the observed transformations. "The phenomenon is so rich in combining several active areas of research that this study may open up new avenues for research in soft matter and materials science," said co-author Professor Slavka Tcholakova, also of Sofia University. "If we're going to build artificial structures with the same sort of control and complexity as biological systems, we need to develop efficient bottom-up processes to create building blocks of various shapes, which can then be used to make more complicated structures," said Smoukov. "But it's curious to observe such life-like behaviour in a non-living thing - in many cases, artificial objects can look more 'alive' than living ones." Contacts and sources: Sarah Collins, University of Cambridge, Citation: Denkov, Nikolai et. al. 'Self-Shaping of Droplets via Formation of Intermediate Rotator Phases upon Cooling.' Nature (2015). DOI: 10.1038/nature16189. Source: http://www.ineffableisland.com/
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Himalayas were born 47 mn years ago

Sydney/Washington: An international team of scientists has discovered the first oceanic microplate in the Indian Ocean— identifying when the initial collision between India and Eurasia occurred leading to the birth of the Himalayas. The team of Australian and US scientists believe the collision occurred 47 million years ago when India and Eurasia initially smashed into each other. Although there are at least seven microplates known in the Pacific Ocean, this is the first ancient Indian Ocean microplate to be discovered. "The age of the largest continental collision on Earth has long been controversial. Knowing this age is particularly important for understanding the link between the growth of mountain belts and major climate change," said lead author Dr Kara Matthews from University of Sydney's school of geosciences. Radar beam images from an orbiting satellite have helped put together pieces of this plate tectonic jigsaw and pinpointed the age for the collision, whose precise date has divided scientists for decades. The new research shows that 50 million years ago, India was travelling northwards at speeds of some 15 cm a year — close to the plate tectonic speed limit. Soon after, it slammed into Eurasia crustal stresses along the mid-ocean ridge between India and Antarctica intensified to breaking point. The crustal stresses caused by the initial collision cracked the Antarctic Plate far away from the collisional zone and broke off a fragment the size of Australia's Tasmania in a remote patch of the central Indian Ocean. "Dating this collision requires looking at a complex set of data but we have added a new observation which has not been previously used to unravel the birth of this collision," explained professor Dietmar Muller in a statement from University of Sydney. The authors, including professor David Sandwell from Scripps Institution of Oceanography in the US, have named the ancient Indian microplate as the Mammerickx Microplate — after Dr Jacqueline Mammerickx, a pioneer in seafloor mapping. The ongoing tectonic collision between the two continents produces geological stresses that build up along the Himalayas and leads to numerous earthquakes every year. According to professor Sandwell, humans had explored and mapped remote lands extensively but the same was not true for our ocean basins. "We have more detailed maps of Pluto than we do of most of our own planet because about 71 percent of the Earth's surface is covered with water," Sandwell added. The advances in comparatively low-cost satellite technology are the key to charting the deep, relatively unknown abyssal plains, at the bottom of the ocean, he pointed out. The paper was published in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters. — IANS. Source: Article
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