New plastic is strong as steel, transparent
October 4, 2007By mimicking a brick-and-mortar molecular structure found in seashells, University of Michigan researchers created a composite plastic that's as strong as steel but lighter and transparent.
It's made of layers of clay nanosheets and a water-soluble polymer that shares chemistry with white glue.
Engineering professor Nicholas Kotov almost dubbed it "plastic steel," but the new material isn't quite stretchy enough to earn that name. Nevertheless, he says its further development could lead to lighter, stronger armor for soldiers or police and their vehicles. It could also be used in microelectromechanical devices, microfluidics, biomedical sensors and valves and unmanned aircraft.
Kotov and other U-M faculty members are authors of a paper on this composite material, "Ultrastrong and Stiff Layered Polymer Nanocomposites," published in the Oct. 5 edition of Science.
The scientists solved a problem that has confounded engineers and scientists for decades: Individual nano-size building blocks such as nanotubes, nanosheets and nanorods are ultrastrong. But larger materials made out of bonded nano-size building blocks were comparatively weak. Until now.
"When you tried to build something you can hold in your arms, scientists had difficulties transferring the strength of individual nanosheets or nanotubes to the entire material," Kotov said. "We've demonstrated that one can achieve almost ideal transfer of stress between nanosheets and a polymer matrix."
The researchers created this new composite plastic with a machine they developed that builds materials one nanoscale layer after another.
The robotic machine consists of an arm that hovers over a wheel of vials of different liquids. In this case, the arm held a piece of glass about the size of a stick of gum on which it built the
new material.
The arm dipped the glass into the glue-like polymer solution and then into a liquid that was a dispersion of clay nanosheets. After those layers dried, the process repeated. It took 300 layers of each the glue-like polymer and the clay nanosheets to create a piece of this material as thick as a piece of plastic wrap.
Mother of pearl, the iridescent lining of mussel and oyster shells, is built layer-by-layer like this. It's one of the toughest natural mineral-based materials.
The glue-like polymer used in this experiment, which is polyvinyl alcohol, was as important as the layer-by-layer assembly process. The structure of the "nanoglue" and the clay nanosheets allowed the layers to form cooperative hydrogen bonds, which gives rise to what Kotov called "the Velcro effect." Such bonds, if broken, can reform easily in a new place.
The Velcro effect is one reason the material is so strong. Another is the arrangement of the nanosheets. They're stacked like bricks, in an alternating pattern.
"When you have a brick-and-mortar structure, any cracks are blunted by each interface," Kotov explained. "It's hard to replicate with nanoscale building blocks on a large scale, but that's what we've achieved."
Source: University of Michigan
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Oct 04, 2007
Rank: 2 / 5 (3)
measure of the strength of the
material.
it seems to be conjecture
Oct 04, 2007
Rank: 3.7 / 5 (3)
Oct 05, 2007
Rank: 2.5 / 5 (2)
Oct 05, 2007
Rank: 2.3 / 5 (3)
deserves more than undocumented,
even unspecified, 'facts' .. AND
where is the PICTURE! . 'Transparent
steel ???? you guys are sleeping
at the wheel!!
Oct 06, 2007
Rank: 3.3 / 5 (3)
Oct 07, 2007
Rank: 2.3 / 5 (3)
Oct 12, 2007
Rank: 2.5 / 5 (2)
Aug 11, 2008
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Oct 03, 2008
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Feb 23, 2009
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Feb 24, 2009
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So if you increase the size of something by ten times, it's area-strength increases by 100 times, but the mass of the object increases by 1000 times. This means that the strength-to-mass ratio of the object is 1/10th of its smaller cousin.
So you can't just scale up those tiny little microscale strength measurements and say "ooooo! Look how strong it will be!" It doesn't work that way.
Incidentally, this is why we don't have huge insects. They can't get any bigger than they are right now, else they won't be able to breath (and if you made them much bigger than that, they wouldn't even be able to support their own body weight).