A new sensor detects helium leaks by monitoring how sound waves propagate through a topological material – no chemical reactions required. Developed by acoustic scientists at Nanjing University, China, the innovative, physics-based device is compact, stable, accurate and capable of operating at very low temperatures. Helium is employed in a wide range of fields, including aerospace, semiconductor manufacturing and medical applications as well as physics research. Because it is odourless, colourless, and inert, it is essentially invisible to traditional leak-detection equipment such as adsorption-based sensors. Specialist helium detectors are available, but they are bulky, expensive and highly sensitive to operating conditions. ### A two-dimensional acoustic topological material The new device created by Li Fan and colleagues at Nanjing consists of nine cylinders arranged in three sub-triangles with tubes in between the cylinders.…