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New York Engineers Create “Liquid Gears” With Two Smooth Cylinders That Transmit Rotation Without Contact, Preventing Wear and Jamming of Traditional Gears.

Written by Noel Budeguer
Published on 17/02/2026 at 20:22
Updated on 17/02/2026 at 20:24
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Researchers at NYU Created in New York a System with 2 Cylinders and Glycerin Water to Transfer Rotation Without Contact and Reduce Wear and Jamming.

What seemed to depend on metal and rigid teeth gained an unexpected shortcut. In New York, two smooth cylinders began to function as gears, but without touching.

The motion comes from a motor-driven cylinder and reaches the other solely through the flow of the liquid. The result points to systems more tolerant of dirt, misalignment, and friction failures.

A Turn After 5,000 Years of Teeth and Friction

Traditional gears were born from precision and rigidity, from the era of old cars to modern gearboxes. This path has always come with a cost in friction, noise, and jamming when something goes out of place.

The proposal replaces the bite of metal with a continuous push from the fluid. Instead of accumulated wear, the liquid tends to absorb small variations and dissipate tensions.

YouTube Video

Glycerin Water Transforms Cylinders into Coupling

The test placed two rotary cylinders in a mixture of water and glycerin. One rotated actively with a motor, while the other remained free, reacting only to what the liquid transmitted.

To visualize the flow, microbubbles were used as markers. This made the pattern of the liquid visible and allowed comparison of the distance between cylinders and speed of rotation.

Microbubbles Reveal the Spin and Direction Change

With fine adjustments, the fluid began to organize whirlpools between the cylinders. This defines whether the passive cylinder spins in the opposite direction or follows the direction of the active cylinder.

According to Physical Review Letters, a peer-reviewed scientific journal of physics, the system describes hydraulic gears capable of transmitting rotation without contact, exploring only the behavior of the liquid in motion.

Near Vortices Imitate Classic Gears Without Touching

When the cylinders are very close, the flow creates opposing vortices between them. This arrangement makes the passive cylinder spin in the opposite direction to the active one, like two common gears working together.

The difference lies in the contact: here there are no teeth, nor shocks between surfaces. The coupling comes from the pattern of the liquid, not from mechanical fitting.

Greater Distance and High Rotation Change to Belt Mode

By increasing the separation and raising the speed, the behavior changes. The flow begins to wrap around the passive cylinder from the outside, and the movement arrives in the same direction as the active cylinder.

The strong point is functional flexibility. The basic design remains intact, and the effect changes with physical conditions, without changing parts and without reengineering the set.

Robots, Energy, and Strategy in Pressure Environments

In motors and robots, failures often arise from dust, misalignment, and continuous friction. A contactless coupling can reduce downtime and maintenance, with fewer jamming and more tolerance to error.

This gains value in scenarios of presence and influence, where reliability weighs more than brute force. In microturbines and energy recovery in slow currents, robustness becomes an advantage and pressures technological competition.

The technology is still in experimental phase but is already changing the way we think about motion transmission. Replacing metal with flow opens up space for more adaptable machines that are less vulnerable to wear.

If this logic scales, it not only changes robotics and energy projects but also redefines reliability priorities in critical systems and changes strategic reading.

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Nilton
Nilton
22/02/2026 22:33

Japonês estuda isso desde a década de 60

Sergio Aguiar
Sergio Aguiar
19/02/2026 11:55

O experimento é valido mas acho difícil ser utilizavel em aplicações, e uma correção: Transmissão de torque sem engrenagens e sem contato mecânico já existe há muito tempo. São os conversores de torque usados em maquinas tratores e barcos.

Douglas Vilela da Silva Junior
Douglas Vilela da Silva Junior
19/02/2026 07:35

Bom dia, estamos falando de engrenagens sem torque, e ou torque mínimo, substituir engrenagens elicoidais, extremamente tratadas, com desempenho magnífico, de força e confiabilidade, esse experimento com certeza foi ótimo, porém não redefine as engrenagens jamais, é só uma adaptação específica de alguma engenharia e ou operação que não precisa de torque.
Ou seja força motora.

Noel Budeguer

Sou jornalista argentino baseado no Rio de Janeiro, com foco em energia e geopolítica, além de tecnologia e assuntos militares. Produzo análises e reportagens com linguagem acessível, dados, contexto e visão estratégica sobre os movimentos que impactam o Brasil e o mundo. 📩 Contato: noelbudeguer@gmail.com

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