Today was fun...the College of Engineering hosted "Engineering Expo." The entire engineering campus was decked out with displays from a wide variety of students, clubs, and departments, and flooded with families. I was involved with three displays:
1. Making carbon nanotube models out of balloons
Carbon nanotubes are cylinders of carbon atoms arranged in 6-sided rings (they look a lot like nanoscale chicken wire). They are only a few billionths of a meter across, but can be a whopping few millionths of a meter in length (about the width of a human hair!). They are exciting to study because they are stronger than steel nanowires (and thus can be mixed into plastics to make them stronger), and if the carbon atoms are arranged correctly, they conduct electricity better than copper wire (so they could theoretically be used to make nano-computers). Yesterday, several people made a giant balloon nanotube model, about as tall as a house (at least as tall as an average room). It was fun!
2. Teaching kids how blood pressure sensors and Doppler ultrasound machines work
The ultrasound machine was my favorite. It's a small microphone/speaker, about the size of a small flashlight. It works based on the "Doppler effect," i.e. that when sound bounces off of a moving object, its pitch changes. When the sound from the ultrasound machine bounces off of moving blood cells, the machine can tell whether the cells are coming toward the microphone (i.e. the pitch is higher) or away from it (i.e. the pitch is lower). It has a speaker on it, so when you put it against an artery, you can hear the blood rushing through it. The younger kids especially liked it ("Dad! Listen! That's the blood in my arm!").
3. Detecting salt with gold
When gold particles are very small (i.e. nanoscale), they aren't yellow anymore--their color changes depending on how small the particles are (very small=blue, extremely small=red). We used a solution of red nano-sized gold particles (it looked like cranberry juice). When we added salt water, it made the gold particles stick together, which made them look blue. It was fun--we had people test Gatorade, pickle juice, and flavored water to see which one had the most salt. Pickle juice turned the solution dark blue, but flavored water didn't noticeably change it.
In summary, today was great. I would like to help out with educational events more often.
I didn't know gold changes color. So why is gold different colors when the particles are different sizes? Or is it so complicated that I wouldn't get it anyway?
ReplyDelete~Kiwi~
Fun! :D Wow, that's strange that gold changes color!! Very curious to learn about it further...
ReplyDelete~Queen Lucy~
Gold is fascinating, I'm sure, but doppler is much more so.
ReplyDeleteTotally cool, in fact. I'd like to pick it as the next report subject I have to do, but my teacher would probably make me do it over until I reported it as a life-threatening instrument that boils your tissues and fries your brain and damages you for life and should ONLY be used in EMERGENCY situations!!! And I'm not so sure I'd come to that conclusion. *sigh* You run into weird people no matter what profession you choose.
Heather
You amuse me, Heath, one day you comment talking about an "unusual" day and the next you're saying crazy things about your college teacher person... :P
ReplyDeleteThat sounds fascinating! And fun, Sir Pen Name! :D Just the sort of thing you'd enjoy.
And how many balloons popped in the making of this sculpture?
So, this blood pressure sensor is different from the normal blood pressure cuff, is it? After having my blood pressure takin' atleast half a dozen times this week I'm curious to know how those cuffs work. Mom probably knows...I'll have to ask her. ;) Having your blood pressure takin' via sensor would be so much more fascinating--here's to outlawing normal, boring cuffs! :P (Hehe, that kid's reaction is so fun.)
Are there red/blue gold rings, perchance? *considers this*
You need to post!!!!!!!! :)
ReplyDelete~Queen Lucy~
Wait, was that a rather un-lady-like outburst? :P
I see my pleas have fallen on deaf ears. Why oh why didn't I take advantage of the time before service on Sunday to reprimand you... :P
ReplyDeleteHello!
ReplyDeleteNo, your pleas haven't fallen on deaf ears...I'm just running late. I'll try and post soon.
Oh good. :P lol, listen to me scolding you when I hardly ever post anymore... :P
ReplyDeletePlease post? Pretty please? ;)
ReplyDelete