Large Sheets of Carbon Nanotubes Produced 155
StCredZero brings news that scientists have developed sheets of nanotubes that measure up to three feet by six feet, and they promise "slabs 100 square feet in area as soon as this summer." The developers see uses for the sheets in electromagnetic shields and airplane construction, and according to the Next Big Future blog, the sheets could also impact the development of solar sails.
"The sheets, which the company can produce on its single machine at a rate of one per day, are composed of a series of nanotubes each about a millimeter long, overlapping each other randomly to form a thin mat. The tensile strength of the mat ranges from 200 to 500 megapascals--a measure of how tough it is to break. A sheet of aluminum of equivalent thickness, for comparison, has a strength of 500 megapascals. If Nanocomp takes further steps to align the nanotubes, the strength jumps to 1,200 megapascals."
Ballistic carbon computing (Score:5, Interesting)
If you don't understand what it mean to say that electrons move in a "ballistic" manner through these nanotubes, imagine that cool trick your math teach showed you in high school with marbles and pegs making a bell curve. Now imagine being able to change the outcome by removing a lot of peg, and then making your computer understand the results.
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http://www.mapageweb.umontreal.ca/cousined/lego/5-Machines/Galton/Galton.html [umontreal.ca]
Ballistic electrons in graphene:
http://www.nanowerk.com/spotlight/spotid=2340.php [nanowerk.com]
Forget electromagnetic shielding (Score:3, Interesting)
Has anyone leaked the details of how their process works beyond the little 'teaser' in the article? Could it be scaled down to personal size? Im thinking it would be great to add their process to a home 3D printer.
Re:Forget electromagnetic shielding (Score:5, Insightful)
Because they are just learning how to create and manipulate such materials? Your question is like a bronze age smith who knows that small bits of iron can be found and worked saying "How come we haven't replaced bronze with this stuff yet?" It's an engineering challenge is all. As production techniques improve it will be easier and cheaper to make.
Also, note that it's just the tensile strength that is comparable to aluminum. They said nothing about it's shear strength or rigidity.
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Re:Forget electromagnetic shielding (Score:5, Informative)
One of the reasons carbon fiber is used is the ability to choose different properties on different axes. Many cyclists want a frame that absorbs road vibration (longitudinally flexible) while being as stiff as possible laterally to transmit pedaling force efficiently and maneuver aggressively.
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Stiffness is dependent on the modulus of elasticity and the cube of the tube diameter (basically.) Gary Klein figured out that large, thin-wall aluminum would allow you to build a frame that retained the stiffness of steel while lowering the weight, by vastly increasing the diameter of the tube. Since aluminum has a similar *specific* modulus of elasticity of steel (the modulus divided by the density) but has a lower den
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As long as we make a lot of it, and use it to sequester atmospheric carbon (from CO2 and CH4, natch, yielding 2 H2O).
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Wouldn't a safer car be one that's so soft that even if it hits you it's like a pillow hitting you? Meaning the least hard possible is preferable?
You can afford to sacrifice strength in the skin of a car, but you can't so much when you're dealing with something like its engine which is less forgiving with that sort of thing. A car with all the give of Tupperware would be fi
Does Ted Stevens know about this? (Score:4, Funny)
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Didn't nanotubes explode with flash photography? (Score:2)
Re:Didn't nanotubes explode with flash photography (Score:2, Interesting)
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Second... I guess you've never heard of... paint.
And finally... not all carbon nanotubes are created equally.
FUD.
Availibility (Score:5, Interesting)
i want one (Score:5, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
Hydrogen storage (Score:2)
I'm much more excited about the possibilities for hydrogen storage rather than new construction material.
Poke around a bit and see what I mean. [google.com]
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Hmmmm. (Score:2)
mass (Score:2, Interesting)
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I see a great application for genetic algorithms (Score:2)
A genetic algorithm [wikipedia.org] is a great way to optimize a set of parameters. If they can find a way to test parameter sets quickly this would be a great opportunity to use a GA to find the best parameters, especially given that there's so many of them.
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It's a series of tubes... (Score:2)
Will it blend? (Score:3, Funny)
(source: wikipedia [wikipedia.org].)
Not necessarily relevant (Score:3, Insightful)
How to reduce aluminium to a fine powder (Score:2)
For example, while aluminum sheets are made of microscopic crystals, there is little danger of breathing significant amounts of aluminum unless you spend a lot of work processing it into a fine powder first.
>>
Step one: reduce the aluminium sheets until they fit in a BlendTec blender.
Step two: turn blender on.
Step three: dump out on table, being careful to avoid aluminium nanosmoke.
Step four: play annoying end of video sound.
insufficient for space elevator (Score:4, Informative)
it's a start (Score:3, Insightful)
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Tensile strength likely to be wrong (Score:2, Interesting)
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The nanotubes are short and straight. Tensile failures will be 'between nanotubes' not 'of nanotubes'.
As the tubes get longer and better aligned, you'll be absolutely right. (You may be absolutely right already of course...)
Justin.
ok... (Score:2)
anyone who knows how much we need for our space elevator???
Making this much nanotube material... (Score:2)
The best example of this are supercapacitor batteries that use carbon nanotubes to dramatically increase the storage capacity of the battery itself. That could make it possible for real plug-in hybrid vehicles with extremely long range or even the possibility by 2020 of a fully-electric vehicle that could seat 4-5 passenger comfortably yet have a range of around 400 km with charging times essentially the
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I am not an electrical expert at all.. but wouldn't such charging times require huge amounts of current to go through the charging wire?
A supercapacitor is very nice.. but I would tend to say that having a large 'tank' and being able to fill it quickly are two different things.
Anyone who can expand a bit on this?
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The question I have is, how strong could it be for the same weight? Off to rtfa...
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Probably much lighter than aluminum, for the same strength.
The question I have is, how strong could it be for the same weight? Off to rtfa...
Yeah, an obvious omission from the summary. This is all I could get from a cursory look at the fa :
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It's the light weight of carbon nanotube wires--only about 20 percent of the weight of the same volume of copper wire--that could make them especially attractive for the aerospace industry.
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but that's in a discussion of using them for wires...can't be bothered to look more closely.
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Re:Awesome... (Score:5, Funny)
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what exactly were you looking for?
Re:Awesome... (Score:5, Funny)
!
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no.
you're not.
we all got it, and thought it funny (thus the rating).
We didn't feel a need to comment on it. We were just rolling with the deadpan [wikipedia.org] nature of the comment. Which made it even more funny. Funny like your tights Captain Obvious.
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You may have a point though. I'd like to see a comparison of all of the materials/chemicals/energy that go into making a sheet of this, versus an equivalent amount of carbon fiber, or aluminum. I doubt it's as environmentally cool as I'm imagining it is.
Re:Awesome... (Score:5, Informative)
I don't have a copy of that book, so can't read it in context, but I still have to call bullshit on this.
Aluminum (Aluminium for you Brits) is the most abundant metal [jlab.org] in the Earth's crust. While smelting it is energy intensive, recycling it is significantly less so [alcoa.com]. There is so much that has already been used, and available for recycling, I can't see us running out in the next couple of centuries, if ever.
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Yes, sadly we weren't subjected to the spelling errors of a certain Mr Hall...
Re:Awesome... (Score:4, Interesting)
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As with so many things... (Score:4, Funny)
We Americans perfected it.
*ducks*
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s/perfected/never learned/
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You Americans perverted it.
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The history of English is also so incredibly strange that only a madman would consider it a sensible language to use at all, given the choice between it and almost anything else. It's a Germanic language (possibly even fair to say "Old Germanic DIALECT") that was heavily perver
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Aluminum makes up 8% of the Earth's crust. The earth's composition of carbon appears to be much lower, the same page shows it's 0.03% of the earth's total weight. That doesn't say much of how easy it is to collect either resource, but abundance doesn't seem to be the answer. I think it's the strength-to-weight ratio that makes carbon nanotube materials interesting, but it's still pretty expensive to make.
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Although there's lots of it around, current estimates show that it will only last for about 200 more years
What the hell are you talking about? Aluminum is likely the most recycled metal on the planet. Why would we "run out" of something we re-use, and is the most abundant metal in the earths crust? It might get more expensive.. but we won't "run out".
Aluminum is plentiful, you're thinking bauxite. (Score:3, Interesting)
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Uhhmmm... Aluminium [wikipedia.org] is ( by a considerable margin) the most abundant metal on Earth, and the third most abundant element on Earth after oxygen and silicon. It makes up 8% or the mass of the Earth's crust. We're not going to run out any time soon.
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(Really, this sounds like people who were complaining about Pluto's demotion because "all those scientists should have been curing cancer instead.")
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Heavier? I think not. (Score:2)
The truth is, wonder materials that are not yet in real production never actually turn out to be that wonderful. Aluminium has not replaced cast iron in many applications. Cars and ships
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rj
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Here's [azom.com] a breakdown of the composition of Aluminum Alloy 6061 to give you an idea...
Re:Mistake in Article? (Score:5, Informative)
But aluminum does have a very good strength to weight ratio. Also, it doesn't rust. Instead it forms an oxide layer which prevents further oxidation.
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Aluminum however just forms that oxide layer, then it stops. A thin layer of oxide prevents any further oxidation (at least until you scratch it, or go hella crazy with the polishing compound.)
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We are. An Internet for bacteria.
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Not necessarily (Score:2)
A space elevator does not "stand" on the ground, bearing all that weight. Rather, the space end is at sufficient distance to PULL it up (considerably higher than synchronous-orbit height). The elevator is under tension, not compression. And the
Duh (Score:2)
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Too early for a price... (Score:2)
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Most software startups have a lot less than one sheet per day to show for themselves during the pilot phase, unless you're counting bug reports, incomplete features, or functionality postponements.
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The point is that they haven't found out, yet, how far it can be practically scaled up or how strong they can make it. Any number you come up with could easily be off by five decimal orders of magnitude.
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Carbon is black when it's in the form of graphite, like in a pencil, or in a lump of coal. When it's in the form of diamond, it's transparent.
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Talk to me when it's OVER NINE THOUSAND!