World’s First Synthetic Tree: May Lead To Technologies For Heat Transfer, Soil Remediation

Posted in chemistry on the September 11th, 2008

In Abraham Stroock’s lab at Cornell, the world’s first synthetic tree sits in a palm-sized piece of clear, flexible hydrogel — the type found in soft contact lenses. Stroock and graduate student Tobias Wheeler have created a “tree” that simulates the process of transpiration, the cohesive capillary action that allows trees to wick moisture upward to their highest branches.

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