Wave-based liquid-interface metamaterials
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Francois, Nicolas
Xia, Hua
Punzmann, Horst
Fontana, P. W.
Shats, Michael
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Macmillan Publishers Ltd
Abstract
The control of matter motion at liquid-gas interfaces opens an opportunity to create two-dimensional materials with remotely tunable properties. In analogy with optical lattices used in ultra-cold atom physics, such materials can be created by a wave field capable of dynamically guiding matter into periodic spatial structures. Here we show experimentally that such structures can be realized at the macroscopic scale on a liquid surface by using rotating waves. The wave angular momentum is transferred to floating micro-particles, guiding them along closed trajectories. These orbits form stable spatially periodic patterns, the unit cells of a two-dimensional wave-based material. Such dynamic patterns, a mirror image of the concept of metamaterials, are scalable and biocompatible. They can be used in assembly applications, conversion of wave energy into mean two-dimensional flows and for organising motion of active swimmers.
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Francois, N., Xia, H., Punzmann, H. et al. Wave-based liquid-interface metamaterials. Nat Commun 8, 14325 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14325
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Nature Communications
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
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