Nano Origami Explained: The Science Behind Shape Changing Droplets
When Tiny Droplets Start Folding Like Origami A Strange Transformation at the Nanoscale Imagine watching a tiny droplet of liquid under a microscope. At first it looks ordinary enough. Round, smooth, exactly what you would expect from something shaped by surface tension. Leave it alone, and nothing dramatic happens. But then the temperature rises slightly. Something subtle shifts at the surface. The droplet, which a moment earlier looked perfectly stable, begins to change its geometry. Edges appear. The smooth sphere sharpens into a hexagon. And then, quite unexpectedly, that hexagon folds inward and turns into a six pointed star. Not a metaphorical star. A real geometric hexagram shape. This is exactly the behavior researchers recently observed in a set of experiments conducted by scientists in France and Israel. The work reveals a phenomenon that is almost poetic in its mechanics. Tiny droplets, stabilized by microscopic molecular layers, begin to fold like sheets of nanoscale ...