I picked up on the idea of bubble metal maybe twenty years ago (possibly in Omni Magazine) in an article about space industries. The simple idea was of foaming molten metal with inert gas in zero gravity, which would allow for an even distribution of the bubbles (they wouldn't float to the top), to produce a light and strong either closed or open cell metal. Great idea, and one I've used loads.
Now you've probably
read about this already, but I feel it's worth a mention here just to prove my aphorism that nothing dates faster than science fiction:
“The trick is to fabricate a lattice of interconnected hollow tubes with a wall thickness of 100 nanometres, 1,000 times thinner than a human hair,” said lead author Dr. Tobias Schaedler.
The resulting nickel matter has a density of just 0.9 milligrams per cubic centimetre.
4 comments:
Aerogel is pretty neat stuff too and if I can get the price down I plan to use it on a project in the new year.
Yeah, I like that stuff too. Seems to me that these are the kinds of materials that bring that SF trope the flying car ever closer.
Neal, I hope so as I'm starting to get on in age and if I don't get my jetpack,flying car and replicator I'm going to want a word with God and demand a refund.
Where're my rocket boots!
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