Making Plastic as Strong as Steel

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Winston Blake
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Making Plastic as Strong as Steel

Post by Winston Blake »

Link.
University of Michigan researchers have developed a nanoinfused polymer that is as strong as steel but as thin as plastic wrap

By Larry Greenemeier

NEW STEEL: University of Michigan researchers have found a way to make a composite plastic that's as strong steel but lighter, transparent and thin as a piece of plastic wrap.
Courtesy of the University of Michigan

Could a seemingly simple clear plastic bag—the kind that you load your fruits and vegetables into at the supermarket—actually be as strong as steel? It could if it was made from a new composite plastic that blends the strength of nanoparticles with the pliancy of a water-soluble polymer.

Although it is no secret that nanotubes, nanosheets and nanorods are incredibly strong when combined in small numbers, larger materials made out of these microscopic building blocks cannot utilize much of that strength because the links between them are weak. But University of Michigan at Ann Arbor researchers report in Science that they have found a way to scale the strength of the nanomaterials to larger materials by transferring stress between nanosheets and a nanoscale polymer resembling white glue. Visually, it looks like a brick wall, where clay nanosheet "bricks" are held together by water-soluble polyvinyl alcohol "mortar." The result, according to the researchers, is a composite plastic that is light and transparent but as strong as steel.

"If you take the nanoscale materials individually, say one carbon tube or one clay sheet, their mechanical properties will be astonishing," says U.M. engineering professor Nicholas Kotov, a co-author of the study. Simply combining a large volume of clay, nanosize platelets into one continuous block, however, results in a brittle chalklike material riddled with cracks.

Researchers created a strip of clear material as thick as a sheet of plastic wrap by using a robotic arm to uniformly blend many millions of square clay platelets 100 nanometers on each side and one nanometer thick (one nanometer equals 3.94 x 10-8 inch) with the same polymer used in Elmer's glue. The robo-arm crafted this new material by dipping a piece of glass about the size of a stick of gum alternately into the gluelike polymer solution and then into a liquid that was a dispersion of clay nanosheets. The end result—consisting of 300 layers of the blended nanomaterials and polymer—was modeled after mother-of-pearl found in the lining of mussel and oyster shells.
"The material is an exemplary structure where we have achieved nearly ideal transfer of the nanoscale mechanical properties to the macroscale," says Paul Podsiadlo, a doctoral candidate in U.M's College of Engineering who assisted with the research. "If we can further achieve the same with these other nanomaterials then we will be able to make lightweight composites which will be exceeding the properties of steel by far."

The bricks-and-mortar structure allowed the layers to form cooperative hydrogen bonds, which gives rise to what Kotov called "the Velcro effect"—one of the reasons the material is so strong. Such bonds, if broken, can reform easily in a new place. Kotov is developing methods to apply the composite in the development of microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) and devices, as well as microfluidics devices for actuation and valve manufacturing. In addition to military uses, improving the ductility of the researchers' nanoinfused plastics could aid in the development of dent and scratch-resistant cars and windshields.

Now that the researchers have created a composite exhibiting resistance to deformation (stiffness) and resistance to load (strength), they are working to improve the composite's ability to dissipate energy, thus improving its toughness, says U.M. mechanical engineering professor Ellen Arruda, another of the study's co-authors. "We want the material to have the ability to absorb the energy of a projectile," she says.

The impetus for the research was a $1.2-million grant awarded last year by the U.S. Defense Department, which was interested in developing more effective armor for the Air Force's unmanned aerial craft as well as for vehicles and body armor for other branches of the armed forces.


The cost of this composite is difficult to estimate, Kotov says. The components are inexpensive and the process does not require large energy expenditures, but it is by no means a fast process. Cost will depend largely on how efficiently processes are developed to create nanoinfused composites and whether these composites need to be produced in high volumes. For highly specialized technologies such as MEMS and microfluidics devices, cost would not be as great an issue as it would in creating large sheets of armor.

The development of these composites is also expected to take less of a toll on the environment, because this superstrong polymer does not require the high temperatures or great energy expenditures required to make steel.
One step closer to full-body protection from small arms fire. Naturally, chainswords will follow.
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Darth Tanner
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Post by Darth Tanner »

Sounds like a big deal if the problems with mass manufacturing it can be resolved. Not only for industrial purposes and body armour but think of a tank with this stuff.

May be the solution to the problem of having air deployable tanks that lose none of the protection of main battle tanks.
that is light and transparent but as strong as steel
Obviously it will have to be produced as part of a white armoured body suite. :D
We want the material to have the ability to absorb the energy of a projectile," she says.
Bring on the energy weapons. Once these go into standard issue kit for infantry laser guns or hand held rocket launchers (bolters) are going to be needed to compete.

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Darth Wong
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Post by Darth Wong »

There are plenty of materials which are "as strong as" steel if you look at one particular kind of strength, but which fall far short in other areas. That's why I always wish these kinds of articles were written by engineers who had some grasp of the fact that there are many different kinds of strength, so you could get some more meaningful insights in them.
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Post by Darmalus »

Just great, even harder to open packaging.
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Post by Zwinmar »

whats its melting point?
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Post by CmdrWilkens »

Looking at the application it is referring to I would have to imagine they are referencing tensile strength. Still that being said there are so many different types of steel that it still means next to nothing.
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Darth Wong
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Post by Darth Wong »

CmdrWilkens wrote:Looking at the application it is referring to I would have to imagine they are referencing tensile strength. Still that being said there are so many different types of steel that it still means next to nothing.
Indeed. I'm guessing that they plan to use it in conjunction with something else to make a composite material. That's usually how you use materials that have highly directional strength properties.
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hongi
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Post by hongi »

Just great, even harder to open packaging.
Harder to recycle.
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