A doughnut can be turned into a
coffee cup by pulling, stretching and molding. Topologically speaking,
therefore, doughnuts and coffee cups are identical.
Credit: Sebastian Huber / ETH Zurich
Doughnuts, electric current and quantum
physics -- this will sound like a weird list of words to most people,
but for Sebastian Huber it is a job description. ETH-professor Huber is a
theoretical physicist who, for several years now, has focused his
attention on so-called topological insulators, i.e., materials whose
ability to conduct electric current originates in their topology.
The easiest way to understand what "topological" means in this
context is to imagine how a doughnut can be turned into a coffee cup by
pulling, stretching and moulding -- but without cutting it.
Topologically speaking, therefore, doughnuts and coffee cups are
identical, and by applying the same principle to the quantum mechanical
wave function of electrons in a solid one obtains the phenomenon of the
topological insulator. This is advanced quantum physics, highly complex
and far removed from everyday experience. Nevertheless, professor Huber
and his collaborators have now managed to make these abstract ideas very
concrete and even to come up with a possible application in engineering
by cutting red tape, as it were, and involving colleagues from
different disciplines all the way through the ETH.
From quanta to mechanics
In the beginning, Sebastian Huber asked a simple question: is it
possible to apply the principle of a topological insulator to mechanical
systems? Normally, quantum physics and mechanics are two separate
worlds. In the quantum world particles can "tunnel" through barriers and
reinforce or cancel each other as waves, whereas everyday mechanics
deals with falling bodies or the structural analysis of bridges. Huber
and his colleagues realized, however, that the mathematical formulas
describing the quantum properties of a topological insulator can be
rearranged to look exactly like those of a well-known mechanical system
-- an array of swinging pendulums.
In particular, just like their quantum mechanical counterparts the
mechanical formulas predicted so-called edge states. In such states an
electric current (or, in the case of pendulums, a mechanical vibration)
flows along the edges of the material, while inside the system nothing
happens. "From a theoretical point of view that was a beautiful result,"
says Huber, "but, of course, it is easier to convince people if you
also show it in practice."
No sooner said than done, together with technicians at the ETH Huber
and his student built a mechanical model consisting of 270 pendulums
that are arranged in a rectangular lattice and connected by small
springs. Two of those pendulums can be mechanically excited, meaning
that they can be shaken back and forth with a particular frequency and
strength. Little by little, the spring couplings cause the other
pendulums to start swinging as well. Eventually, for a particular
excitation frequency the physicists saw what they had been hoping for:
the pendulums inside the rectangle stood still, whereas those along the
edge vibrated rhythmically, causing a "wave" to flow around the
rectangle. In other words, the coupled pendulums did, indeed, behave
just like a topological insulator.
Robotic arms and lenses for sound
What started out as a pipe dream and a nice gimmick for professor
Huber could soon become a useful tool. The mechanical edge states of the
coupled pendulums, it turns out, are so robust -- "topologically
protected," in technical language -- that they persist if the array of
pendulums is disordered and even if a part of the rectangle is removed.
Such properties would be interesting, for instance, in sound and
vibration insulation, which is important in various areas such as
industrial production, where robot arms have to place objects precisely
and without jittering. Moreover, one can imagine materials that convey
sound in one direction only, or others that focus sound like a lens.
"Such applications are very challenging, but still realistic," says
Chiara Daraio, ETH-professor for mechanics and materials. Of course, the
mechanical systems would first have to shrink considerably -- Huber's
pendulums are, after all, half a metre long and weigh half a kilo. The
engineers are already building a new device that works without pendulums
and that will only be a few centimetres in size.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
ETH Zurich.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
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