Posted on 05/12/2011 4:45:53 PM PDT by decimon
PASADENA, Calif.Stronger than steel or titaniumand just as toughmetallic glass is an ideal material for everything from cell-phone cases to aircraft parts. Now, researchers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have developed a new technique that allows them to make metallic-glass parts utilizing the same inexpensive processes used to produce plastic parts. With this new method, they can heat a piece of metallic glass at a rate of a million degrees per second and then mold it into any shape in just a few milliseconds.
"We've redefined how you process metals," says William Johnson, the Ruben F. and Donna Mettler Professor of Engineering and Applied Science. "This is a paradigm shift in metallurgy." Johnson leads a team of researchers who are publishing their findings in the May 13 issue of the journal Science.
"We've taken the economics of plastic manufacturing and applied it to a metal with superior engineering properties, he says. "We end up with inexpensive, high-performance, precision net-shape parts made in the same way plastic parts are madebut made of a metal that's 20 times stronger and stiffer than plastic. A net-shape part is a part that has acquired its final shape.
Metallic glasses, which were first discovered at Caltech in 1960 and later produced in bulk form by Johnson's group in the early 1990s, are not transparent like window glass. Rather, they are metals with the disordered atomic structure of glass. While common glasses are generally strong, hard, and resistant to permanent deformation, they tend to easily crack or shatter. Metals tend to be tough materials that resist cracking and brittle fracturebut they have limited strength. Metallic glasses, Johnson says, have an exceptional combination of both the strength associated with glass and the toughness of metals.
(Excerpt) Read more at media.caltech.edu ...
Although this stuff is not transparent yet, you've got to wonder whether or not somebody might not hit on the right formula in the future that will make transparency possible. That could spell the end of not only the plastics industry but the glass industry as well.
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