Press Release
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2008, 47, 6690–6693 doi: 10.1002/anie.200801347 Nr. 32/2008 Gel undergoes PeristalsisAs though alive: polymer gel moves without external stimulusContact: Shingo Maeda, Waseda University, Tokyo (Japan) Registered journalists may download the original article here: Peristaltic Motion of Polymer Gels Large or small, machine parts only move when controlled by an external
impulse. Biological systems, on the other hand, are capable of
autonomous movements that continuously follow their own rhythms and
spatial patterns. For example, intestinal peristalsis—a circular,
constricting, unidirectional muscular contraction—depends in part on an
inherent muscular rhythm. Japanese researchers led by Shingo Maeda at
Waseda University have now developed a polymer gel that can undergo
peristaltic motion without an external stimulus—as though it were alive, as they report in the journal Angewandte Chemie.
 © Wiley-VCH
A gel is a sponge-like three-dimensional network whose pores are filled
with a liquid. The secret of the rare “living” gel is a special chemical
reaction that occurs within this liquid. It is based on the
Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction, also known as the “chemical clock”. This
reaction involves a system of several coupled reactions that involve
feedback, meaning that the materials in the reaction sequence influence
their own rate of formation. Such systems oscillate over time, and the
oscillations can manifest themselves in the form of spatial patterns.
The reaction causes ruthenium ions within the gel to periodically change
their level of oxidation. The gel is constructed so that it swells to
varying degrees, depending on the charge of the ruthenium ion. The
oscillating chemical reaction thus causes the gel to swell up and shrink
periodically.
A ribbon-shaped piece of gel is traversed lengthwise by swelling and
shrinking regions. This results in peristaltic motion. If a small
cylindrical object is placed on the gel, the wave motion of the gel
causes it to roll forward—like a miniature conveyor belt.
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