Showing posts with label smart materials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label smart materials. Show all posts

Monday, October 7, 2024

A glass that builds and heals itself

That looks a whole lot like solgels to me, but I'll admit that my knowledge of solgel chemistry is about twenty five years out of date and based on a single summer of research at Miami University (no, not University of Miami).

The video summarizes researchers' findings that amino acids can form glasses with an index of refraction close to that of silica glass, adhesive properties, and a natural inclination to form convex lens shapes...and that self heal themselves as they rehydrate themselves.

Monday, February 26, 2024

Self-Healing Material

Self-healing materials could be pretty cool if we get them figured out.

I appreciate the brief dalliance into cold welding between metallic pieces in space - something I've posted about before.

And I appreciate Steve Mould, of course, who sadly keeps his humour (British, natch) mostly in check for this video.

Monday, November 5, 2018

Smart Materials of the Future - with Anna Ploszajski



"Rock-paper-scissors is a game that you use to compare materials' properties. The rock blunts the scissors because rock is harder than stainless steel."

C'mon, nerd, rock-paper-scissors is just a game like mumbledepeg or roshambo.

The simplicity of showing a smart material via pine cones is brilliant.

Oh, I found a definition of smart materials that I very much like (via BBC): "[s]mart materials have properties that react to changes in their environment. This means that one of their properties can be changed by an external condition, such as temperature, light, pressure or electricity. This change is reversible and can be repeated many times."

Other smart materials mentioned in the video are lime mortar from the Egyptian pyramids, piezoelectric quartz crystals, thermochromic pigments (on a mug), NiTiNOL, and ferrofluids. Most of the latter materials are applied to the future of airplane design.