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A new paper published in Nature upends that paradigm, and argues that the character of many biological materials is actually created by the water that permeates these materials. [...] the authors group these and other materials into a new class of matter that they call "hydration solids," which they say "acquire their structural rigidity, the defining characteristic of the solid state, from the fluid permeating their pores." [...]
[...] "If you think of biological materials like a skyscraper, the molecular building blocks are the steel frames that hold them up, and water in between the molecular building blocks is the air inside the steel frames. We discovered that some skyscrapers aren't supported by their steel frames, but by the air within those frames."
"This idea may seem hard to believe, but it resolves mysteries and helps predict the existence of exciting phenomena in materials," [...]
[...] allowed them to describe the characteristics that familiar organic materials display with very simple math. [...]
The paper's findings apply to huge amounts of the world around us: [...] from 50% to 90% of the living world around us, including all of the world's wood, but also other familiar materials like bamboo, cotton, pine cones, wool, hair, fingernails, pollen grains in plants, the outer skin of animals, and bacterial and fungal spores that help these organisms survive and reproduce.
[...] any natural material that's responsive to the ambient humidity around it. [...]
"When we take a walk in the woods, we think of the trees and plants around us as typical solids. This research shows that we should really think of those trees and plants as towers of water holding sugars and proteins in place," [...] "It's really water's world."
Scientists discover that water molecules define the materials around us (phys.org)
'Water's world'... despite the (more and more frequent, wilder and wilder) fires.
Reminds me of the generic Air-gen effect (the power of solid materials utilizing the physics of water and ambient humidity...).
Wonder what practical applications the drastic simplification of the math may yield... simulations involving organic materials should require much less computing power ( Had we but computing power enough, and time...).
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 07 June 2023 - 06:18 PM