Posted on 10/15/2015 10:44:31 AM PDT by Red Badger
Airplane maker Boeing has unveiled what it calls the "The Lightest Metal Ever"called microlattice, the material is a construct that is 99.99 per cent air. It has been developed by Boeing's HRL Laboratories along with colleagues at the University of California and the California Institute of Technology. The material has been developed as a way to reduce weight on airplanes or even rocketsa paper describing the development of the material was written by the team and published in the journal Science back in 2011though the researchers have not yet revealed what sort of changes have been made since that time.
The more an airplane weighs, the more fuel it uses during takeoff, while flying and during landing, thus efforts to create lighter materials to replace those already in use have been underway for quite some time. The development team has released a video of the new material (in which they refer to it as a 3D open cellular polymer structure) in actiondemonstrating its lightness by placing a rectangular cuboid atop a dandelion. The team also points out that the material also has a high degree of absorption, which means it can be depressed and bounce backanother feature that would come in handy on airplanes.
It appears at this time that Boeing is hoping the material can be used inside the cabin, rather than as a major structural component, e.g. in overhead bins, under the floor, or in other fixtures that are used to create an environment inside of a modern aircraft.
In the earlier paper the researchers described making the material first by creating a template and then by coating it with electroless nickel platingafterwards the template was removed via etching. The result was a material that got its strength from the lattice, similar to the way bones grow to be strong despite being light, though with the lattice it is taken down to the micro scalethe lattice was a network of extremely tiny tubes with walls that had a thickness of just 100 nanometers, all made of a nickel-phosphorus alloy, though it is still not clear if the same materials were used in the newly updated microlattice.
The team at HRL suggest that the material could also eventually make its way into space-bound vehicles, for the very same reasons it would be useful in aircraft, to save on weightplus its ability to compress might mean sending up objects that could be expanded after launch, saving on space in a cargo hold.
Explore further: World's lightest material developed
More information: www.boeing.com/features/2015/10/innovation-lightest-metal-10-15.page
Journal reference: Science
3D printing?
Well, it’s worth a ‘nickel’.......................8^)
Not given currently technology, but then none of this constitutes ‘current technology’, so there’s the rub.
Aye, Scotty.
Also know as industrial sapphire.
High end watch crystals are sometimes made of it.
http://www.gtat.com/products-and-services-sapphire-for-industrial-markets.htm
Al2O3
http://www.gia.edu/gia-news-research-Sapphire-Series-Introduction-to-Sapphire-and-Synthetic-Sapphire
What about its strength?
I’m sure it is good for something, if only for dishes on tabletops of dandelions. As a battery electrode it might have some promise.
Transparent aluminum sounds sexier than sapphire, and when you show a lexan box that they assume is solid, the illusion is complete, and they start looking for it at Home Depot.
“...”(I) am not sure what is gained out of it being made from an actual metal alloy other than scientific curiosity...”
Well, if it is replacing plastic components, this stuff won’t burn, should be able to tolerate a wider range of temperatures, which would be useful properties for air and space vehicles.
The video has some more info..................
It also absorbs energy......................
Roswell continues to provide... 70 years later.
Roswell was just a scout ship. The BIG MOTHER-SHIP is still on its way.........................
Pic no show.....................
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