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posted by cmn32480 on Friday February 01 2019, @06:57PM   Printer-friendly
from the i-won't-make-the-dirty-joke-about-robots dept.

Penn Engineer's 'Metallic Wood' Has the Strength of Titanium and the Density of Water

High-performance golf clubs and airplane wings are made out of titanium, which is as strong as steel but about twice as light. These properties depend on the way a metal's atoms are stacked, but random defects that arise in the manufacturing process mean that these materials are only a fraction as strong as they could theoretically be. An architect, working on the scale of individual atoms, could design and build new materials that have even better strength-to-weight ratios.

In a new study published in Nature Scientific Reports [open, DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-36901-3], researchers at the University of Pennsylvania's School of Engineering and Applied Science, the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, and the University of Cambridge have done just that. They have built a sheet of nickel with nanoscale pores that make it as strong as titanium but four to five times lighter.

The empty space of the pores, and the self-assembly process in which they're made, make the porous metal akin to a natural material, such as wood.

And just as the porosity of wood grain serves the biological function of transporting energy, the empty space in the researchers' "metallic wood" could be infused with other materials. Infusing the scaffolding with anode and cathode materials would enable this metallic wood to serve double duty: a plane wing or prosthetic leg that's also a battery.


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  • (Score: 2) by ikanreed on Friday February 01 2019, @09:44PM (1 child)

    by ikanreed (3164) Subscriber Badge on Friday February 01 2019, @09:44PM (#795201) Journal

    Like as in elemental titanium? "pure" titanium?

    Because wikipedia lists that tensile strength as 63,000, and plain old fucking oak at 77,000.

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  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Friday February 01 2019, @09:53PM

    by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Friday February 01 2019, @09:53PM (#795203) Journal

    This paper describes a nickel-based cellular material, which has the strength of titanium and the density of water. The material’s strength arises from size-dependent strengthening of load-bearing nickel struts whose diameter is as small as 17 nm and whose 8 GPa yield strength exceeds that of bulk nickel by up to 4X. The mechanical properties of this material can be controlled by varying the nanometer-scale geometry, with strength varying over the range 90–880 MPa, modulus varying over the range 14–116 GPa, and density varying over the range 880–14500 kg/m3. We refer to this material as a “metallic wood,” because it has the high mechanical strength and chemical stability of metal, as well as a density close to that of natural materials such as wood.

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