Rice grain behavior inspires new smart material, scientists report
Scientists at the University of Birmingham have discovered that packed rice grains behave unusually under pressure, weakening under rapid compression but staying stronger when pressure is applied slowly. The international research team used this property to engineer a new metamaterial that can automatically adjust its stiffness without electronics or sensors. The findings were published in the journal Matter. The material combines rice-based granular units with sand, which strengthens under rapid loading, to create a speed-sensitive composite. Researchers say the material could be used in soft robots that adapt to tasks and in protective equipment that responds differently depending on impact speed. Dr. Mingchao Liu of the University of Birmingham stated that the work turns a curious phenomenon into a design principle, letting physics decide how the material behaves.
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Sources: ScienceDaily
