Search results for viscoelastic solids

Polymers Mar 7, 2016

Treeing it up: Research team documents design of wood-based polymers

Richard Wool was a pioneer in green engineering and author of the first book to systematically describe the chemistry and manufacture of bio-based polymers and composites derived from plants.

Condensed Matter Feb 24, 2016

Soft solids and the science of cake

Researchers hope that working out the behaviours of soft solids, which can act like either solids or liquids, may make for tastier cakes – and safer oil wells.

Materials Science Jan 11, 2016

Self-adaptive material heals itself, stays tough

An adaptive material invented at Rice University combines self-healing and reversible self-stiffening properties.

Materials Science Oct 26, 2015

Ants: Both solid-like and liquid-like

Collections of ants have a remarkable ability to change shapes and tasks based on the demands of their environment. When floodwaters hit, they self-assemble and form rafts to stay alive. They can also use their bodies to ...

Cell & Microbiology Oct 8, 2015

Novel microscopy method illuminates cell changes caused by aging, injury and disease

A University of Maryland-led team of researchers has developed an optical microscopy technique capable of shedding new light on how the mechanical properties of cells change in the course of aging, injury healing and disease ...

Earth Sciences Jun 30, 2015

Research redefines the properties of faults when rock melts

Geoscientists at the University of Liverpool have used friction experiments to investigate the processes of fault slip.

Materials Science May 15, 2015

Simple Leonardo da Vinci experiments combined with advanced theory reveal new atomic-level insights into rubber

Friction, the force that slows down objects as they slide across a surface, can save lives when car brakes are slammed. Yet despite its obvious importance, no one knows for sure how friction works at the level of atoms and ...

Mar 27, 2015

Swimming algae offer insights into living fluid dynamics

None of us would be alive if sperm cells didn't know how to swim, or if the cilia in our lungs couldn't prevent fluid buildup. But we know very little about the dynamics of so-called "living fluids," those containing cells, ...

General Physics Sep 11, 2014

Findings suggest how swimming cells form biofilms on surfaces

New research findings point toward future approaches to fighting bacterial biofilms that foul everything from implantable medical devices to industrial pipes and boat propellers.

Earth Sciences May 11, 2014

Ice-loss moves the Earth 250 miles down

At the surface, Antarctica is a motionless and frozen landscape. Yet hundreds of miles down the Earth is moving at a rapid rate, new research has shown.

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