When liquid metal is released into water, its high surface tension makes it form droplets – rather than streams. But when a low voltage is applied, the surface tension drops, allowing the liquid metal to stream out as hair-like filaments. Image: Minyung Song, NC State University.
When liquid metal is released into water, its high surface tension makes it form droplets – rather than streams. But when a low voltage is applied, the surface tension drops, allowing the liquid metal to stream out as hair-like filaments. Image: Minyung Song, NC State University.

Researchers at North Carolina (NC) State University have developed a technique that allows them to produce streams of liquid metal at room temperature. By applying a low voltage to the liquid metal, the researchers were able to tune its surface tension across at least three orders of magnitude.

"Liquids want to form droplets, because that lowers their surface energy," says Michael Dickey, a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at NC State and co-corresponding author of a paper on this work in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. "And that's especially true for liquid metals, because they have much higher surface tension than other liquids."

Surface tension is measured in units of millinewtons per meter. Most liquids, such as gasoline or water, have surface tension values of 20–72 millinewtons per meter. The liquid gallium alloys used in the NC State study have a surface tension of at least 500 millinewtons per meter.

"We can lower the surface tension from 500 to 0.1 by applying less than one volt," says Minyung Song, who recently defended her PhD at NC State and is first author of the paper. "And that completely changes how the liquid metal behaves."

When gallium indium alloy is squeezed out of a nozzle, it forms into a droplet due to its high surface tension. If you wanted to create a stream of liquid metal, you'd have to apply a high enough flow-rate to eject it rapidly from the nozzle. Even then, the resulting stream wouldn't be very stable.

But the researchers found that applying a low voltage to the liquid metal when it is underwater creates a thin layer of oxide at the surface. This allowed them to create running streams of liquid metal with the diameter of a human hair – and at a low flow-rate.

"This oxide acts like soap molecules do for water, lowering the surface tension and reducing the fluid's tendency to bead up," says Karen Daniels, professor of physics at NC State and co-corresponding author of the paper, "but here the effect is completely reversible by turning off the voltage. You can't easily take the soap back out of the water."

When the low voltage is applied to moving liquid metal, it effectively creates a flowing oxide skin that runs along the surface of the liquid metal. In other words, the oxide layer isn't static – the whole thing flows steadily out of the nozzle, like a wire.

The technique gives researchers a great deal of control over how the liquid metal behaves, because – up to a point – the higher the voltage they apply to the liquid metal, the lower the liquid metal's surface tension. At the highest voltages, however, the oxide layer forms a thick crust that disrupts the way the metal flows, resulting in a fluid flow that resembles dripping wax.

The research team had previously shown that applying low voltage to a liquid metal droplet at rest lowers its surface tension and causes it to form fractal patterns. That study was also performed on liquid metal underwater. This new study is the first to address what happens when the liquid metal is in motion.

"We're only beginning to explore the full range of potential applications for this technique," Dickey says. "One idea would be to effectively create liquid metal wires at room temperature. If you encase them in an elastic sheath, you'd have stretchable wires. It could also be used as a new tool for studying and controlling fluid behavior. It's exciting because more than 100 years of scientific studies show liquid streams break up into droplets. We have found a simple way to stabilize these streams."

This story is adapted from material from North Carolina State University, with editorial changes made by Materials Today. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of Elsevier. Link to original source.