Tuesday, November 11, 2025

 

A fix for frost: Engineers use electricity to zap ice without heat or chemicals






Virginia Tech
Associate Professor Jonathan Boreyko introduces voltage to a layer of frost in his lab, moving his defrosting research forward with a new approach. 

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Associate Professor Jonathan Boreyko introduces voltage to a layer of frost in his lab, moving his defrosting research forward with a new approach.

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Credit: Photo by Alex Parrish for Virginia Tech.





During winter months, frost can unleash icy havoc on cars, planes, heat pumps, and much more. But thermal defrosting with heaters is very energy intensive, while chemical defrosting is expensive and toxic to the environment.

Jonathan Boreyko, associate professor in mechanical engineering at Virginia Tech, and his research team may have found a new and improved method for deicing. His philosophy is to combat ice by exploiting its own physics instead of using heat or chemicals, creating methods of frost removal that are more cost effective and environmentally friendly. 

Their previous work leveraged the small amount of voltage that naturally exists within frost to polarize a nearby water film, creating an electric field that could detach microscopic ice crystals. Now his team is amping up this concept by applying a high voltage to an opposing electrode to more forcibly dislodge frost from its surface. The result is a new method the team has named “electrostatic defrosting” (EDF). The approach to creating it has been published in Small Methods.

Charging forward

As frost crystals grow, the water molecules arrange into a tidy ice lattice. But sometimes a water molecule lands a little off-pattern — maybe it has an extra hydrogen nearby (H3O+) or is missing one entirely (OH–). Think of it as if you’re putting together a big jigsaw puzzle too quickly, so that a piece gets jammed in the wrong spot or is missing entirely. These tiny errors create what scientists call ionic defects: places in the frost where there is a bit too much positive or negative charge.

The team hypothesized that when applying a positive voltage to an electrode plate held above the frost, the negative ionic defects would become attracted and “migrate” to the top of the frost sheet, while the positive ionic defects would be repelled and migrate toward the base of the frost. In other words, the frost would become highly polarized and exhibit a strong attractive force to the electrode. If this attractive force is strong enough, frost crystals could fracture off and jump into the electrode.

Even without any applied voltage, the overhanging copper plate removed 15 percent of the frost. This is because frost can weakly self-polarize even without any applied electric field. However, applying voltage dramatically boosts the extent of polarization. When the team turned on 120 volts of power, 40 percent of the frost was removed. At 550 volts, 50 percent was removed.

“We really thought we were onto something here,” Boreyko said. “Keep turning up the voltage and more frost will jump away, right? What was unexpected was when the opposite happened.”

Turning up the power further, something curious happened: less frost jumped away, reducing to only 30 percent removal at 1,100 volts and 20 percent at 5,500 volts. The results contradicted the theoretical model, which predicted that the performance should continually improve with increasing voltage. 

The team found a possible explanation for this plunge in frost removal at higher voltages. When growing frost on an insulating glass substrate, rather than a copper one, the higher voltages performed only slightly worse. This indicated that charge leakage from the polarized frost into the underlying substrate was occurring, especially at high voltages, which could be mitigated by using a more insulating surface. 

Upgrading again to an air-trapping superhydrophobic substrate, now the highest voltage removed the most frost, as initially expected. Turning up the voltage now ripped off up to 75 percent of the frost.

“When using the superhydrophobic surface, the electrostatic defrosting was powerful enough to make a hidden Virginia Tech ‘VT’ logo become clearly visible on the surface after the frost jumped off,” said Venkata Yashasvi Lolla, the lead researcher on the project, now in postdoctoral work at Berkeley.

The research continues, toward the eventual goal of 100 percent ice removal. Part of this research will include the removal of frost on multiple types of surfaces, expanding the potential applications across both industrial and consumer use.

“This concept of electric deicing is still in a very early stage,” Boreyko said. “Beyond this first paper, our goal is to improve EDF by reducing charge leakage and attempt higher voltages and electrode placements, among various other emerging strategies. We hope that in the near future, EDF will prove to be a cost-effective, chemical-free, and low-energy approach to deicing.” 

Original study: DOI: 10.1002/smtd.202501143

 

The interannual variation of summer precipitation in the East China Sea exhibits its own uniqueness



Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Schematic illustrating the factors influencing precipitation variability over the East China Sea. 

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The interannual variability of summer precipitation over the ECS is not significantly affected by the WNPSH, but is related to a local cyclonic anomaly in the lower troposphere. This cyclonic anomaly is favored by the southward shift of the upper-tropospheric westerly jet.

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Credit: Xinyu Li





The western North Pacific subtropical high (WNPSH) is one of the most important factors affecting the summer climate over East Asia, bringing either torrential rain or scorching drought to the regions beneath its sway. However, a joint study recently published in Atmospheric and Oceanic Science Letters by researchers from Hohai University, Institute of Atmospheric Physics/Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology, China, identifies an exceptional region in East Asia—the East China Sea (ECS). The interannual variability of summer precipitation over this area shows no statistically significant linkage to the WNPSH.

It is well known that the East Asian subtropical rainy belt is typically situated along the northern flank of the WNPSH, stretching from the middle–lower reaches of the Yangtze River basin (YRB) eastward to southern Japan. Therefore, the interannual variability of this rainy belt is significantly affected by the zonal shift of the WNPSH. Despite the ECS being situated between the YRB and southern Japan, the WNPSH cannot induce precipitation anomalies over this area, implying that the ECS precipitation has its own uniqueness.

This study identifies the large-scale circulation anomalies responsible for the interannual variability in precipitation over the ECS. It is found that the local cyclonic anomaly in the lower troposphere plays an important role. It favors low-level convergence of moisture and upward motion, and thus promotes enhanced precipitation. Further results suggest that this cyclonic anomaly tilts northward with height and is favored by the southward shift of the upper-tropospheric westerly jet.

"These results highlight the spatial heterogeneity of variability of the East Asian subtropical rainy belt. A more comprehensive understanding of its interannual variability requires separate analyses for different regional segments", concludes the corresponding author, Dr. Xinyu Li.

Small digital frictions can slow the spread of misinformation



New research from the University of Copenhagen points to a simple yet effective method for combating misinformation on social media: make it slightly harder to share content.



University of Copenhagen




Social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and X have made it incredibly easy to share content with friends and acquaintances through like and share buttons.

But we don’t just share cat videos and cake recipes—we also share content that turns out to be fake news and misinformation. Research has shown that such content is particularly attractive and spreads faster on social media than reliable information—partly because platform algorithms prioritize sensational posts that are widely shared.

But what if sharing content became a bit more difficult? That’s the idea proposed by researchers from the University of Copenhagen in a new article published in the Nature journal npj Complexity.

“Our idea is to introduce a small pause in the sharing process to make people reflect on what they’re sharing before clicking the button,” says PhD student Laura Jahn, lead author of the study alongside Professor Vincent F. Hendricks. She elaborates:

“We developed and tested a computer model that simulates how information spreads on social media platforms like X, Bluesky, and Mastodon. It shows that a small digital friction—such as a pop-up message—can effectively reduce content sharing.”

Learning improves quality

The researchers’ model shows that frictions can be an effective tool to reduce the number of shares. However, it also shows that frictions alone don’t necessarily improve the quality of the content being shared.

To address this, they added a learning element to the model that users encounter when attempting to share a post:

“It could be a pop-up with a short quiz asking questions like: How is misinformation defined, and what does this social media platform do to limit fake news? The idea is that this learning element will prompt users to reflect on their behavior and share fewer problematic posts,” explains Vincent F. Hendricks, concluding:

“And we can see from the model that when friction is combined with learning, the average quality of shared posts increases significantly.”

Field study ahead

The next step for the researchers is to test whether the strategy of introducing digital frictions with learning elements has the same positive effects in real-world settings.

“We hope our proposal will inspire tech giants to think innovatively in the fight against misinformation. They could help us test the promising computer model to see whether engagement with low-quality content decreases and whether users become better at recognizing misinformation in real situations,” say Laura Jahn and Vincent F. Hendricks.

If collaboration with a major social media platform isn’t possible, the researchers will use simulated platforms available for research purposes.

Read the article A perspective on friction interventions to curb the spread of misinformation in the journal npj Complexity.

The research was conducted at the Center for Information and Bubble Studies at the University of Copenhagen.

 

Brain activity goes to extremes in soccer fans




Radiological Society of North America
Brain Activity Goes to Extremes in Soccer Fans 

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Rendering of the negative effect of significant defeat. The salience network is deactivated during a significant defeat. Color bar represents Z values (warmer colors indicate higher positive Z value, cooler colors indicate negative/relative deactivation). A = anterior, L = left, S = superior.

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Credit: Radiological Society of North America (RSNA)




OAK BROOK, Ill. – Studying brain patterns in soccer fans, researchers found that certain circuit regions of the brain were activated while viewing soccer matches involving their favorite team, triggering positive and negative emotions and behaviors, according to a new study published today in Radiology, a journal of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA). The researchers say these patterns could apply to other types of fanaticism as well, and that the circuits are forged early in life.

Soccer is a global phenomenon, and its followers exhibit a broad spectrum of behaviors, from spectatorship to intense emotional engagement, providing a useful model for studying social identity and emotional processing in competitive situations.

Rivalries run deep in the history of sports, and fans can be very protective of their “home” team and favorite players. These same fans run the gamut of emotions watching their team succeed or fail over the course of a game or match, cheering when they score or raging at a bad call. Soccer fans are known for their team loyalty and enthusiasm, particularly in Europe and South America.

“Soccer fandom provides a high-ecological-validity model of fanaticism with quantifiable life consequences for health and collective behavior,” said lead author Francisco Zamorano, biologist, Ph.D. in medical sciences at Clínica Alemana de Santiago and associate professor at Facultad de Ciencias para el Cuidado de la Salud, Universidad San Sebastián, Santiago, Chile. “While social affiliation has been widely studied, the neurobiological mechanisms of social identity in competitive settings are unclear, so we set out to investigate the brain mechanisms associated with emotional responses in soccer fans to their teams’ victories and losses.”

For the study, researchers used functional MRI (fMRI)—a technique that measures brain activity by detecting changes in blood flow—to examine 60 healthy male soccer fans (20–45 years) of two historic rivals. Fanaticism was quantified with the Football Supporters Fanaticism Scale, a 13-item scale that measures the fanaticism of football fans, assessing two sub-dimensions: “Inclination to Violence” and “Sense of Belongingness.”

Brain imaging data were acquired while participants watched 63 goal sequences from matches involving their favorite team, a rival or a neutral team. A whole-brain analysis was conducted to compare neural responses when participants viewed their favorite team scoring against an archrival (significant victory) versus when the archrival scored against their team (significant defeat), with control conditions for non-rival goals.

The fMRI results showed that brain activity changed when the fan’s team succeeded or failed.

“Rivalry rapidly reconfigures the brain’s valuation–control balance within seconds,” Dr. Zamorano said. “With significant victory, the reward circuitry in the brain is amplified relative to non-rival wins, whereas in significant defeat the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC)—which plays an important role in cognitive control—shows paradoxical suppression of control signals.”

Paradoxical suppression refers to the attempt to suppress a thought, feeling or behavior and it results in the opposite outcome.

Higher activation in the reward system regions occurred when participants’ teams scored against rivals versus non-rivals, suggesting in-group bonding and social identity reinforcement. Dr. Zamorano notes that the effect is strongest in highly fanatic participants, predicting momentary self-regulatory failure precisely when identity is threatened and accounting for the puzzling ability of otherwise rational individuals to suddenly “flip” at matches.

“Clinically, the pattern implies a state-dependent vulnerability whereby a brief cooling-off or removal from triggers might permit the dACC/salience control system to recover,” he said. “The same neural signature—reward up, control down under rivalry—likely generalizes beyond sport to political and sectarian conflicts.”

The neural results identify mechanisms which may inform communication, crowd management, and prevention strategies around high-stakes events in the reward amplification and control down-regulation under rivalry, Dr. Zamorano noted.

“Studying fanaticism matters because it reveals generalizable neural mechanisms that can scale from stadium passion to polarization, violence and population-level public-health harm,” he said. “Most importantly, these very circuits are forged in early life: caregiving quality, stress exposure, and social learning sculpt the valuation–control balance that later makes individuals vulnerable to fanatic appeals. Therefore, protecting childhood is the most powerful prevention strategy. Societies that neglect early development do not avoid fanaticism; they inherit its harms.”

Soccer fandom offers an ethical, high-validity proxy to time-lock these processes in the brain and to test interventions (framing, fairness cues, event design, crowd management, etc.) that translate to politics, sectarianism and digital tribalism, he noted.

Dr. Zamorano adds that urgency is evident with today’s global conflicts and political narratives. For example, he said the January 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol assault, demonstrated how political fanaticism can override democratic norms when identity fusion reaches critical mass.

“The participants showed classic signs of compromised cognitive control, exactly what our study found in the reduced dACC activation,” Dr. Zamorano said. “In short, investigating fanaticism is not merely descriptive—it is developmentally informed prevention that protects public health and strengthens democratic cohesion. When we discuss fanaticism, the facts speak for themselves.”

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“Brain Mechanisms across the Spectrum of Engagement in Football Fans: A Functional Neuroimaging Study.” Collaborating with Dr. Zamorano were José María Hurtado, Ph.D., Patricio Carvajal-Paredes, Ph.D., César Salinas, M.T., Ximena Stecher, M.D., Patricia Soto-Icaza, Ph.D., Rommy Von Bernhardi, M.D., Ph.D., Waldemar Méndez, Pablo Billeke, M.D., Ph.D., Vladimir López, M.D., Ph.D., and Claudio Silva, M.D., Ph.D.

Radiology is edited by co-interim editors Vicky Goh, M.B.B.Ch., King’s College London, U.K., and Kathryn Fowler, M.D., University of California San Diego, California, and owned and published by the Radiological Society of North America, Inc. (https://pubs.rsna.org/journal/radiology)

RSNA is an association of radiologists, radiation oncologists, medical physicists and related scientists promoting excellence in patient care and health care delivery through education, research and technologic innovation. The Society is based in Oak Brook, Illinois. (RSNA.org)

For patient-friendly information on brain MRI, visit RadiologyInfo.org.