Negative CTE material 23
florescent_beige writes "An article on Yahoo talks about zirconium tungstate (ZrW2O8), a material that has a negative coefficient of thermal expansion over a wide range of temperatures. Being non-toxic, it has applications in dentistry, as well as metallurgy and optics. Johns Hopkins physicyst Collin Broholm describes the physics behind the behaviour."
Huh? (Score:3, Informative)
"Schoolchildren learn at an early age that solids expand when they are heated and contract when cooled, like wooden doors that are more difficult to open in the summer due to swelling. "
Um, I thought that was humidity? Wood is fibrous, I'd think what little effect temperature has on the size is nnothing compared to the sponge-like behavior of all those fiber cells.
Dumb Example... (Score:3, Interesting)
A better example would be running hot water over stuck jar lid. The metal expands faster than the glass.
Kinda off-topic but not really: Water gets denser as it cools to 4 degrees C, then it expands as the temperature drops until ice forms at 0 degrees C. Ice is acutally less dense than water (which is why it floats).
Well.... (Score:1)
It also has something to the thinwalling of aluminum cans. Aluminum is the most costly component to the cost of a can of coke. Packaging engineers are constantly thinking of ways to stretch more cans out of a pound of aluminum, and sometimes they get a little too thin.
Gee, I guess my biology degree, and my stint with a can manufacturing company paid off today...
Re:Dumb Example... (Score:1)
U know I have done that many times, but never thought as to why it works. For some reason I thought that the heat from the water loosened/melted whatever was sticking the jar and lid together.
So don't make lids out of this stuff!
Re:Dumb Example... (Score:1)
Re:Dumb Example... (Score:1)
But seriously- could this not be used to seal stuff in cold temperature applications. And could this be used like a reverse affect SMA(Shape Memory Alloy).
Nice.....
Re:Dumb Example... (Score:2)
Shit, Ive lived in california all my life (desert) and I didnt know doors COULD stick :)
Re:Dumb Example... (Score:2)
You must live in a newer house, the house I live in has one door that sticks like mad, though its more from the ground shifting durning earthquakes, than it is from humidity/heat.
Another fun demonstartion of termal expantion is the old ball and ring trick. You have a ball that is just slighty too big to fit through a ring, you heat the ring and the ball, then try passing the ball through the ring again, and bingo it goes through. Of course, its a bit eaiser if they are of different materials, and the ring has a higher rate of expansion.
error in article. (Score:2, Interesting)
Thus;
http://www.jhu.edu/~jhumag/0299web/tech.html#shri
Old News (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Old News (Score:2)
By all accounts it's non toxic too. What a great material!
Re:Old News (Score:3, Informative)
Zirconium Tungstate on the other hand has an intrinsic anomalous negative volumetric CTE which occurs over the temperature range from just above 0 K to 1050 K.
This stuff is probably pretty boring to the average slashdot geek as evidenced by the absolute mighty tempest of comments generated here but if you are interested check out http://www.isis.rl.ac.uk/ISIS97/feature1.pdf [rl.ac.uk]
No posts?!? (Score:1)
Thermal stability is not new (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Thermal stability is not new (Score:2, Informative)
That's completely different from a monolithic isotropic material thats got negative cte in all directions.
Hot/Cold (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Hot/Cold (Score:1, Informative)
The material in the article is great because you could use it to balance expansions. That filling you were talking about would be fine if you you drank hot coffee or ate frozen ice cream (even coffee ice cream) because you could balance its expansion so that it equalled that of the tooth itself.
For things like telescopes, a material like this could be huge because you could balance the expansion of one by the contraction of the other and keep things perfectly still. This could be a big boon to any instrumentation that requires thermal stability.