Posted on 10/22/2021 12:08:18 PM PDT by Red Badger
A steak knife made from a new form of hard wood was able to slice through meat with easeBo Chen VIEW 1 IMAGES --------------------------------------------------------------------------
By experimenting with alternative methods of wood processing, scientists have come up with a new hardened form of the natural material that can be fashioned into sharp knives and sturdy nails. The team reports the resulting knives are nearly three times sharper than a standard dinner table knife, and can even be thrown into the dishwasher after use.
This hardy new form of wood is the handiwork of scientists at the University of Maryland, who set out to supercharge the material's natural strength, which lies in the cellulose packed inside. Cellulose is the primary component of wood, accounting for 40 to 50 percent of the material, and itself has a higher strength-to-density ratio than many engineered materials, including ceramics, metals and polymers.
But the remainder of wood, made up of the binding materials hemicellulose and lignin, dilutes its overall strength and limits its applications. The authors of the study set out remove these weaker parts of the wood while preserving the cellulose structures.
“It’s a two-step process,” says senior author Teng Li. “In the first step, we partially delignify wood. Typically, wood is very rigid, but after removal of the lignin, it becomes soft, flexible, and somewhat squishy. In the second step, we do a hot press by applying pressure and heat to the chemically processed wood to densify and remove the water.”
The hardened wood was then carved into a knife and coated in mineral oil, which counters the natural tendency of cellulose to absorb water, extending the lifespan of the material, preserving the blade's sharpness and making it dishwasher safe. According to the team, the hard wood knife is almost three times sharper than a stainless steel dinner table knife and is 23 times times harder than natural wood. It was used to cut through a medium-well done steak with ease.
“The strength of a piece of material is very sensitive to the size and density of defects, like voids, channels, or pits,” says Li. “The two-step process we are using to process the natural wood significantly reduces or removes the defects in natural wood, so those channels to transport water or other nutrients in the tree are almost gone.”
Separately, the team used its new hard wood to produce nails, which were not only rust-resistant but just as sharp as regular steel nails. The scientists demonstrated this by using their wooden nails to hammer together three wooden boards, which they did without inflicting any damage on the nails.
The scientists hope this new form of wood can come to offer an eco-friendly alternative to steel and ceramics, which need to be forged in furnaces at extreme temperatures. More research will be needed to ascertain exactly how energy efficient the production process is, but the scientists are optimistic about the ultra-hard wood's potential.
“In our kitchen, we have many wood pieces that we use for a very long time, like a cutting board, chopsticks, or a rolling pin,” says Li. “These knives, too, can be used many times if you resurface them, sharpen them, and perform the same regular upkeep.”
The research was published in the journal Matter.
Source: Cell Press via EurekAlert
They already make stabby things capable of eluding metal detectors.
Plastics and polymers.
I carry a sharp spike antler clipped on my belt loop.
I’ve done some pretty fair hacking with narrow slats. I’m sure you could fire-harden lots of different woods to make a decent machete or sword.
ANYONE that puts anything but a butter knife through a dishwasher deserves to cut everything from then on with a spoon. Bring on the Ginsu spoons for idiots.
That was my thought.
People have been putting spears and arrows into the fire for many thousands of years.
Let me know when they sell an Obsidian knife set.
:)
Easier to smuggle onto a plane!
A. I never understood that game. My family never played it.
Now, I don’t care about it. Trix are 4 kids!
B. I wish I could cook a steak like that one. Mine usually never get really tender, no matter how I cook them.
Yup, it is mainly the micro corrosion from getting wet that dulls a razor blade, not the drawing across the face action.
Try Sous vide. Very tender steaks every time. Foolproof.
And I always thought they were fence posts...
It would be impressive if they left one on a termite pile for a couple of weeks and it survived.
Your palm will hone a commercial razor better then any “from TV” thing. You are so correct it isnt even funny. Dry it. Hone it. Keep it from moisture. Your $50 23 blade will last a long time as would the cheapest disposable if you hone it before use an take care of it.
Heh... or just throw it in the dishwasher with the rest of your spoons.
“three times sharper than a standard dinner table knife”
I have a mahogany obsidian dagger that was hand knapped for me by an Irish/Nez Perce Special Forces friend, who has since passed.
It is wicked sharp.
He also gave me a sword and several knives he’d made from spring steel he’d salvaged and re-forged into blades.
That guy was a badass.
:)
That steak looks to be way overcooked.
Everyone knows that we right-wingers just pick up a steak and rip chunks off with our fangs, anyway.
I’m glad they told us it was a sreak. I’d have never guessed from looking at the picture.
Hundreds!!
😂🤭
I have an Anova. I know it intimately. Sous Vide is advanced.
Saying it is fool proof... God invented morons you could not conceive of. I write software. Trust me.
Dont try an use your sock to sous vide. It will not end well.
Dont throw an unconstrained cook target in the water and bitch when it ends up looking or tasting like a whale anus. (eggs excepted unless they are they are cracked)
Understand the whys and hows of food safety and dont grow a salmonella smorgasbord on your chicken, e coli on your beef or God forbid cross contaminant with your pork.
Other than that it is fool proof.
God must love fools. He made so many of them... :-)
Bkmk
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