Materials scientists and applied physicists collaborating at Harvard's  School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have invented a new  device that can instantly identify an unknown liquid.
The device, which fits in the palm of a hand and requires no power  source, exploits the chemical and optical properties of precisely  nanostructured materials to distinguish liquids by their surface  tension.
The findingoffers a cheap, fast, and portable way to perform quality control tests and diagnose liquid contaminants in the field.
"Digital encryption and sensors have become extremely sophisticated  these days, but this is a tool that will work anywhere, without extra  equipment, and with a verywide range of potential applications," says  co-principal investigator Marko Lončar, Associate Professor of  Electrical Engineering at SEAS.
Akin to the litmus paper used in chemistry labs around the world to  detect the pH of a liquid, the new device changes color when it  encounters a liquid with a particular surface tension. A single chip can  react differently to a wide range of substances; it is also sensitive  enough to distinguish between two very closely related liquids.
A hidden message can actually be "written" on a chip, revealing itself  only when exposed to exactly the right substance. Dipped in another  substance, the chip can display a different message altogether.
"This highly selective wetting would be very difficult to achieve on a  two-dimensional surface," explains lead author Ian B. Burgess, a  doctoral candidate in Lončar's lab and in the Aizenberg  Biomineralization and Biomimetics Lab. "The optical and fluidic  properties we exploit here are unique to the 3D nanostructure of the  material."
The "Watermark Ink," or "W-Ink," concept relies on a precisely  fabricated material called an inverse opal. The inverse opal is a  layered glass structure with an internal network of ordered,  interconnected air pores.
Co-authors Lidiya Mishchenko (a graduate student at SEAS) and Benjamin  D. Hatton (a research appointee at SEAS and a technology development  fellow at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at  Harvard), recently perfected the production process of large-scale,  highly ordered inverse opals.
"Two factors determine whether the color changes upon the introduction  of a liquid: the surface chemistry and the degree of order in the pore  structure," says Mishchenko, who works in the Aizenberg lab. "The more  ordered the structure, the more control you can have over whether or not  the liquid enters certain pores by just changing their surface  chemistry."
Burgess and his colleagues discovered that selectively treating parts of  the inverse opal with vaporized chemicals and oxygen plasma creates  variations in the reactive properties of the pores and channels, letting  certain liquids passthrough while excluding others. Allowing liquid into a pore changes the material's optical properties,  so the natural color of the inverse opal shows up only in the dry  regions.
Each chip is calibrated to recognize only certain liquids, but it can be  used over and over (provided the liquid evaporates between tests).
With the hope of commercializing the W-Ink technology, the researchers  are currently developing more precisely calibrated chips and conducting  field tests with government partners for applications in quality  assurance and contaminant identification.
"If you want to detect forgeries," says Burgess, "you can tune your  sensor to be acutely sensitive to one specific formulation, and then  anything that's different stands out, regardless of the composition."
One immediate application would allow authorities to verify the fuel  grade of gasoline right at the pump. Burgess also envisions creating a  chip that tests bootleg liquor for toxic levels of methanol.
The W-Ink technology would additionally be useful for identifying  chemical spills very quickly. A W-Ink chip that was calibrated to  recognize a range of toxic substances could be used to determine, on the  spot, whether the spill required special treatment.
"A device like this is not going to rival the selectivity of GC-MS [gas  chromatography-mass spectrometry]," remarks co-principal  investigatorJoanna Aizenberg, the Amy Smith Berylson Professor of  Materials Science at SEAS and a core faculty member of the Wyss  Institute.
"But the point is that if you want something in the field that requires  no power, is easy to use, and gives you an instant result, then the  W-Ink may be what you need."
 
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