How Negative Thermal Expansion Works 53
Bill Kendrick writes "Scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, are discovering why compounds like zirconium tungstate 'are acting like they are from Bizarro world': contracting, rather than expanding, when heated.
They believe it's a combination of geometrical frustration (which sounds a lot like what it is), and a 'twisting' motion of the atoms."
Call me dumb... (Score:2)
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:2, Troll)
I do believe some moderator misunderstood me (Score:3, Interesting)
I am not inferring that this concept is neither interesting nor useful. I can understand how my statement can be interpreted as a troll, but come on...
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:1)
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously. "What's so useful about all these stupid electrons, anyway!"
Why is it that very often the first response to an article about some scientific discovery/invention/whatever is "well why would this ever be useful?" Trust me, someone will find a use.
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:4, Interesting)
Clockmakers have used such a material for a long time; it's a complex alloy called invar [orologeria.com]. The linked article gives the composition of one type of invar, which has an expansion coefficient of 1.6 ppm. This means that a bar of invar ten kilometres long that heats up by one kelvin will get longer by 1.6cm. That's pretty good. The equivalent steel bar would expand by 11cm.
And yeah, the above figures were very nearly copied verbatim from the article; read it if you're interested.
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:2)
While invar is useful, it just has a small (and controllable, through different alloying) coefficient. It's used many times to put metal through glass becaue they tune it to have the same thermal expansion as the glass. Therefore you can have a gas-tight glass container with metal coming out of it (used mostly for phototubes).
The "controllable" nature is the most important - in most situations you just want a matched
E.g., standard measures (Score:3, Interesting)
Suppose you wanted something that didn't expand or contract in certain temperature ranges
No supposition required. A physical metal rod was the official definition of the meter [wikipedia.org] for a long time. Measurement stability requires such properties. And such rods are still used today [nist.gov] in less critical areas.
Back on the original topic, any unusual property of materials is bound to find an application.
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:3, Informative)
"If you could create the right mix of materials to neutralize thermal expansion, that would be quite a significant technological advance," Schlesinger said.
THAT is how it would be useful...
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:2)
Oh yeah, almost forgot, you're dumb.
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:2)
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:4, Interesting)
Plaster of Paris expands slightly as it sets, and then contracts again. This is also why people use plaster to cast things.
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:2)
Now that that is out of the way thing about this. If you are sending a vehicle that needs to remain air tight into a very hot environment this property would be ideal. The vehicle seals would become more functional rather then breaking down. The trick would be maintaining enough functional space inside the vehicle as well as maintaining the relative shape through the constriction.
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:1)
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:2)
In the case of long-chain molecules (think latex), the free energy (F=U-TS, where T is the temperature, S is the entropy, and U is the thermal energy of the system) is minimized when the entropy is *decreased* by stretching them out, thus aligni
Re:Call me dumb... (Score:1)
Water.. (Score:2)
Re:Water.. (Score:2)
Re:Water.. (Score:2)
Re:Water.. (Score:2)
This material in the article is neat because it contracts when heated over a large temperature range and without melting or anything like that.
Wrong (Score:2)
Re:Wrong (Score:2)
Re:Wrong (Score:1)
Ice ice baby (Score:2)
h2o also contracts when heated above its melting point.
Is this solely due to air and crystalisation upon freezing or does put h2o do this in a vacuum?
Who knows! not me! I never lost control...
Re:Ice ice baby (Score:1)
I believe this is due to the directional hydrogen bonds formed by water when it is frozen. The crystalline structure that accomodates the angles of these hydrogen bonds is less dense than the randomly packed configuration that the water molecules can assume once they have significant kinetic energy to break the hydrogen bonds, i.e. the ice melts.
I would also like to point out that if you try to melt ice in a
Re:Ice ice baby (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ice ice baby (Score:3, Informative)
Most materials do the same. There are very few liquids that don't subliminate in a vacum.
Re:Ice ice baby (Score:2)
Look at this page [uiuc.edu]. This is not complex stuff. I remember this from high school chemistry. The diagram on the bottom shows water. Plug in your temperature and pressure, and look to see where you are at (solid, liquid, gas). Below approximately 0.01 atmospheres, water can go directly from liquid to a gas. In fact, at such low pressures, you cannot have liquid water at all!
Re:Ice ice baby (Score:1)
Carbon dioxide is an example of a substance that e
Re:Ice ice baby (Score:1)
Re:Ice ice baby (Score:2)
Anything which has been "freeze dried" has been done so through sublimation. They freeze the food rock-solid and put it in a vacuum. The water sublimates into gas and gets pumped off. *POOF!* Bone-dry food with no heat damage and no shriveling.
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Re:Ice ice baby (Score:2)
interesting to know, I think space stations expose waste to the vacuum which 'dries' it before it is expelled (or retained, keep space tidy!)
Re:Ice ice baby (Score:1, Flamebait)
If water didn't have the property of ice expanding as it cools then life in the rivers and streams would be decimated in the winter where it gets cold enough to form ice.
Such care and consideration for such a vital part of our lives. Water that is. Oh, sorry, I forgot, that's just the luck of random chance. Silly me.
Yes! Anthropic principle (Score:2)
That's a beautiful reductio ad absurdum of that argument for "intelligent design." At first I thought you were sincere, but your argument is actually a perfect description of the anthropic principle.
Re:Ice ice baby (Score:2)
Re:Ice ice baby (Score:1, Insightful)
If no worlds in some alternate universe could ever support life, then no one would be around to discuss it.
My point? A random dice roll of universal constants is as good as any other: not lucky, not special.
Grammar nazi here (Score:2)
Re:Ice ice baby (Score:2)
people who talk about random chance do so [on topic as well] on thin ice, lies upon h
Instead of negative thermal expansion (Score:2, Informative)
junior high science fair experiment (Score:2)
Re:junior high science fair experiment (Score:1)
So we could use this material to generate energy from heat.
Re:junior high science fair experiment (Score:1)
geometrical frustration (Score:1)
Maybe that's why it's called geometrical frustration.
Walking up stairs (which sounds a lot like what it is)!
Plutonium (Score:2)