Water
forms floating 'bridge' when exposed to high voltage
By
Lisa Zyga

When
water in two beakers is exposed to a high voltage, a floating water bridge forms
between the beakers. Credit: Elmar Fuchs, et al.
While
it's one of the most important and abundant chemical compounds on Earth, water
is still a puzzle to scientists. Much research has been done to uncover the structure
of water beyond the H2O scale, which is thought to be responsible for many of
waters unique properties. However, the nature of this structure, governed
by hydrogen bonds, is currently unknown.
Water undoubtedly is the
most important chemical substance in the world, explained Elmar Fuchs and
colleagues from the Graz University of Technology in Austria in a recent study.
The interaction of water with electric fields has been intensely explored
over the last years. We report another unusual effect of liquid water exposed
to a dc electric field: the floating water bridge.
When exposed to a
high-voltage electric field, water in two beakers climbs out of the beakers and
crosses empty space to meet, forming the water bridge. The liquid bridge, hovering
in space, appears to the human eye to defy gravity.
Upon
investigating the phenomenon, the scientists found that water was being transported
from one beaker to another, usually from the anode beaker to the cathode beaker.
The cylindrical water bridge, with a diameter of 1-3 mm, could remain intact when
the beakers were pulled apart at a distance of up to 25 mm.
Why water
would act this way was a surprise, Fuchs told PhysOrg.com. But the groups
analyses have shown that the explanation may lie within the nature of the waters
structure. Initially, the bridge forms due to electrostatic charges on the surface
of the water. The electric field then concentrates inside the water, arranging
the water molecules to form a highly ordered microstructure. This microstructure
remains stable, keeping the bridge intact.
The
scientists reached the microstructure hypothesis after observing that the density
of the water changes between the beaker edges and the center of the bridge. A
microstructure consisting of an arrangement of water molecules could have a similar
density variation.
In
their experiments, the scientists also discovered the existence of high frequency
oscillations inside the bridge, and they observed corresponding inner structures
with a high-speed camera and visualization system. Unlike the much slower surfaces
waves, these high frequency oscillations werent caused by surface tension.
Rather, the scientists predict that the oscillating structures were triggered
by the waviness of the voltage supply itself.
The
researchers noticed a pattern with the inner structures: every experiment started
with a single inner structure, which then decayed into additional structures after
a few minutes of operation. The group thought that this decay might be caused
by either dust contamination or the increasing temperature of the water bridge
under the electric field. As the water temperature increased from 20 degrees Celsius
to more than 60 degrees Celsiuswhich took about 45 minutesthe bridge
collapsed.
The
scientists explain that the unusual effect of the floating water bridge, as well
as the microstructures they observed during the interaction of water with electric
fields, could be another piece to the puzzle of the structure of water. The group
said that they are currently investigating how highly ordered microstructures
may explain the density change in the water bridge, with the results to appear
in a future publication.
Citation:
Fuchs, Elmar C., Woisetschläger, Jakob, Gatterer, Karl, Maier, Eugen, Pecnik,
René, Holler, Gert, and Eisenkölbl, Helmut. The floating water
bridge. J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 40 (2007) 6112-6114.