Skip to content

QualityPoint Technologies News

Emerging Technologies News

Menu
  • About Us
  • Technology
  • Medical
  • Robots
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)
  • 3D Printing
  • Contact Us
Menu

Huge Discount Offer: 14 ebooks + 2 courses

‘See through soil’ could help farmers deal with future droughts

Posted on February 16, 2021

In research that may eventually help crops survive drought, scientists at Princeton University have uncovered a key reason that mixing material called hydrogels with soil has sometimes proven disappointing for farmers.

Hydrogel beads, tiny plastic blobs that can absorb a thousand times their weight in water, seem ideally suited to serve as tiny underground reservoirs of water. In theory, as the soil dries, hydrogels release water to hydrate plants’ roots, thus alleviating droughts, conserving water, and boosting crop yields.

Yet mixing hydrogels into farmers’ fields has had spotty results. Scientists have struggled to explain these uneven performances in large part because soil–being opaque –has prevented attempts at observing, analyzing, and ultimately improving hydrogel behaviors.

In a new study, the Princeton researchers demonstrated an experimental platform that allows scientists to study the hydrogels’ hidden workings in soils, along with other compressed, confined environments. The platform relies on two ingredients: a transparent granular medium–namely a packing of glass beads–as a soil stand-in, and water doped with a chemical called ammonium thiocyanate. The chemical cleverly changes the way the water bends light, offsetting the distorting effects the round glass beads would ordinarily have. The upshot is that researchers can see straight through to a colored hydrogel amidst the faux soil.

This research is appearing in the journal Science Advances. This capability enables 3D visualization of fluid flows and other processes that occur within normally inaccessible, opaque media, such as soil and rocks.

The scientists used the setup to demonstrate that the amount of water stored by hydrogels is controlled by a balance between the force applied as the hydrogel swells with water and the confining force of the surrounding soil. As a result, softer hydrogels absorb large quantities of water when mixed into surface layers of soil, but don’t work as well in deeper layers of soil, where they experience a larger pressure. Instead, hydrogels that have been synthesized to have more internal crosslinks, and as a result are stiffer and can exert a larger force on the soil as they absorb water, would be more effective in deeper layers. Engineers will now be able to conduct further experiments to tailor the chemistry of hydrogels for specific crops and soil conditions.

Results of this study provide guidelines for designing hydrogels that can optimally absorb water depending on the soil they are meant to be used in, potentially helping to address growing demands for food and water.

News Source: Eurekalert

Share

Related News:

  1. MIT’s new ethylene sensor could help prevent food waste
  2. Technique could enable cheaper fertilizer production
  3. Tinted solar panels could boost farm incomes
  4. RIPE’s third breakthrough demonstrates photosynthetic hacks can boost yield, conserve water
Master RAG ⭐ Rajamanickam.com ⭐ Bundle Offer ⭐ Merch ⭐ AI Course

  • Bundle Offer
  • Hire AI Developer

Latest News

  • MIT Researchers Unveil New Framework to Test AI Privacy Risks in Clinical Models January 6, 2026
  • MIT Researchers Develop AI-Driven Robot That Builds Furniture From Text Prompts December 17, 2025
  • Kling O1: A New Breakthrough in AI Video Creation December 4, 2025
  • Coactive: Teaching AI to See and Understand Visual Content June 10, 2025
  • Harvard Sues Trump Administration Over International Student Ban May 23, 2025
  • Stanford Researchers Develop AI Agents That Simulate Human Behavior with High Accuracy May 23, 2025
  • ​Firebase Studio: Google’s New Platform for Building AI-Powered Applications April 11, 2025
  • MIT Researchers Develop Framework to Enhance LLMs in Complex Planning April 7, 2025
  • MIT and NVIDIA Unveil HART: A Breakthrough in AI Image Generation March 25, 2025
  • Can LLMs Truly Understand Time Series Anomalies? March 18, 2025

Pages

  • About Us
  • Basics of 3D Printing
  • Key Innovations
  • Know about Graphene
  • Privacy Policy
  • Shop
  • Contact Us

Archives

Developed by QualityPoint Technologies (QPT)

QPT Products | eBook | Privacy

Timesheet | Calendar Generator

©2026 QualityPoint Technologies News | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme