
Doctoral student Alexander Wissner-Gross (above) and Efthimios Kaxiras, Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Physics, have shown that treated diamond coatings can keep water frozen at body temperature. |
‘Hot’ ice could lead to medical deviceHarvard physicists have shown that specially treated diamond coatings can keep water frozen at body temperature, a finding that may have applications in future medical implants. Doctoral student Alexander Wissner-Gross and Efthimios Kaxiras, physics professor and Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Physics, spent a year building and examining computer models that showed that a layer of diamond coated with sodium atoms will keep water frozen up to 108 degrees Fahrenheit. In ice, water molecules are arranged in a rigid framework that gives the substance its hardness. The process of melting is somewhat like a building falling down: pieces that had been arranged into a rigid structure move and flow against one another, becoming liquid water. |
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