Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Spontaneous Assembly (or "Self Assembly") of Hot Dog Slices and Meatballs


Originally posted May 22, 2012:
Cut hot dogs into ~1 cm thick slices and place them in a pan of water. They will float at the water's surface and attractive capillary interactions will draw them together into an organized close-packed array.
References:
Dungey, K. E. J. Chem. Educ. 2000, 77, 618.
Campbell, D. J.; Freidinger, E. R.; Hastings, J. M.; Querns, M. K. "Spontaneous Assembly of Soda Straws." J. Chem. Educ., 2002, 79, 201.
Campbell, D. J.; Freidinger, E. R.; Querns, M. K. "Spontaneous Assembly of Magnetic LEGO® Bricks." The Chemical Educator, 2001, 6, 321.
Campbell, D. J.; Freidinger, E. R.; Hastings, J. M.; Querns, M. K. "Spontaneous Assembly of LEGO®s." Chem13 News, Sept., 2001, 8.
ABOVE LEFT: Cutting hot dogs into slices. ABOVE RIGHT: Floating them in a pan of water. Note: sometimes tapping the pan will help shake out some of the defects in the assembled pattern.
Updated January 22, 2014:
BELOW: Assembly of meatballs after being churned about in boiling water.

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