PDA

View Full Version : Powerful Shape-Shifting Metal Created



Skywizard
8th October 2013, 20:55
http://static.ddmcdn.com/gif/blogs/dnews-files-2013-10-shape_shifting_metal_crystals_gallery-670x440-jpg.jpg

In what sounds like news straight from a Marvel comic book (or the Roswell crash :)), scientists have created a shape-shifting metal alloy that can handle being blasted with heat and then cooled thousands of times. Afterward, the metal reverts to its original state.

Scientists have known about a special form of metals with a crystalline structure called martensite for a while now. These martensitic metals are made by combining several metals into an alloy that can be crumpled or bent and still return to a previous shape. Sounds magical, right? The drawback is that they tend to be like a wind-up toy with a dying battery. After a bit of deformation, they can degrade to the point of uselessness.

A team from the University of Minnesota’s Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics department might have toughened the metal up. They’ve created a new martensitic metal alloy using specific proportions of zinc, gold and copper — and their version degrades very little after more than 16,000 thermal cycles, according to a letter they published in the journal Nature (abstract).

The new metal alloy could have all kinds of applications, according to the team led by professor Richard D. James and postdoctoral research associate Yintao Song. ”You could make devices that convert heat to electricity directly,” James told the BBC’s Simon Redfern. “They could use the waste heat from computers and cell phones to recharge the battery and make them more efficient.”

Beyond such energy-harvesting devices, other potential applications include automatic sun-facing technology for space, super-efficient refrigerators, quieter jet engines as well as improved sensors for cars and medical devices.

Read Full Story: http://news.discovery.com/tech/alternative-power-sources/powerful-shape-shifting-metal-created-131007.htm


peace...
skywizard

Bob
8th October 2013, 21:11
I think I have that on my eye glasses frames, you can bend it, try to break it, it springs back. Really great stuff..

http://www.imagesco.com/nitinol/nitinol-index.html

They have some great products one can get and explore the stuff in action.


http://www.imagesco.com/articles/nitinol/03.html -- that link talks about the theory in laymen's terms


and this version of the product I think can be used to make artificial muscles.. :)

http://www.imagesco.com/articles/nitinol/05.html


http://www.imagesco.com/catalog/nitinol/BioMetal3.gif

spiritguide
8th October 2013, 23:53
In 2000 I had experimental surgery performed on me to repair an abdominal aeortic aneurysm. I was number fifteen and they placed a stint in my aorta to repair it. It was done through my right femoral artery. The stint was made of this special metal that was pliable when at 70 degrees but after it reached body temp after insertion it became rigid and conformed to the artery. Surgeon said it is like building a ship in a bottle. Went home two days later and resumed regular activity within a week. Still here. These metals do their job for sure.

Peace!

cursichella1
9th October 2013, 04:44
Thanks for posting this!

Like the material found at Roswell...perhaps this type of material was one of the reasons for the intense gold mining millennia ago and for the "slave race" we may have been; could it also be related to the "missing" gold bullion we are currently hearing about (Wilcock, Fulford, 911, Fort Knox?), the crazy increase in value as well as all of these shops and airport kiosks (!) that have been buying up old gold jewelry?

Could it possibly help to explain the 1-1.5 Billion tons of copper that were mined from the Great Lakes prior to the historical arrival of the Europeans to North America?

wF0eWbTEgzo

In this video, they try to prove ancient Greeks were behind it? The fact that so much of it went missing long before Columbus, and not attributable to Native Americans, is pretty fascinating, regardless.

Thieves stealing copper wiring and pipes from homes....no more copper pennies?

Imagine the uses of this material (and cost...yikes!)!

spiritguide
9th October 2013, 12:51
Talked to a 30 year telecoms tech yesterday and the subject of cables came up and he said that copper was able to carry more data than fiber optics when used for short distances. Fiber optics is only used for long distance transmit and that is why copper is used for all local transmittance. This is why phone companies can provide phone, internet and TV on two little wires to the home. Cable companies are getting some serious competition now and either they reduce prices or loose customers. When you think about it most electronics are a composition of silica, silver, gold and copper arranged in different circuits for the efficiencies derived from the materials and their molecular structures when certain frequencies are induced to excite the electrons. IMHO

Peace!