UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Materials can store information about their past — like a crease in a piece of paper that has been unfolded is a “memory” of being folded — that can be retrieved or read out and used for various purposes. In everyday life, combination locks must remember the turns of the dial to open, and the memory of specialized materials is used to make airplanes safer, electronics more efficient and bridges stronger and more resilient. Now, researchers at Penn State have demonstrated that ordinary adhesive tape has a specialized type of material memory capable of storing a sequence of multiple memories that can be fine-tuned to have different strengths or be erased to make way for new memories.
A paper describing the research was published recently in the New Journal of Physics.
“Many materials or systems have a property called return-point memory that allows them to remember a sequence of events,” said Nathan Keim, associate professor of physics in the Penn State Eberly College of Science and the leader of the research team. “A common example is a combination lock that must remember the sequence of turns of the dial in order to open.”
Return-point memory generally relies on the input that causes the deformation to be alternating, Keim explained. The dial on the combination lock is first turned clockwise to a certain number and then must be turned back past zero in a counterclockwise direction to form the next memory. The defining characteristic of return-point memory is that if at any point you reverse the steps, the system returns to its previous state.
“We were interested if there was a system that could demonstrate this ability to remember a series of events without alternating the input,” Keim said. “With a combination lock, if after the first turn, you return to zero and turn clockwise again, the memory will be lost.”
The researchers set out to develop a way to add memories without losing previous ones.
“We found that we could store the sequence of multiple memories with a single-directional input in ordinary adhesive tape,” Keim said. “And not only that, but that the strength of the memories is tunable — meaning we can adjust how strong the memories are — and they can be erased to reset the system.”