Levitating Droplets

Applying more than 50 volts across a droplet of weak hydrochloric acid causes the drop to rise into the air above a glowing plasma layer

Written byAmerican Institute of Physics
| 3 min read
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Researchers in France have discovered a new way to levitate liquid droplets, which surprisingly also creates a mini light show, with the droplet sparking as it floats above a faint blue glowing gap.

Described this week in the journal Applied Physics Letters, from AIP Publishing, the work may offer an inexpensive new way to generate a freely movable microplasma, as well as yield insights into fundamental physics questions.

The floating effect is similar to Leidenfrost levitation -- in which droplets dance on a hot vapor cushion. But by creating the vapor with a strong jolt of electricity instead of heat, the researchers found they could ionize the gas into a plasma that glowed a soft blue light.

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