A joint research project's findings have just been published in the journal Nature Materials from engineers from MIT, Caltech, and ETH Zurich that has yielded a "nano-architectured" material that could prove stronger than Kevlar and steel. This material, once scaled, could provide a means of developed lightweight, protective coverings, blast shields, and other impact-resistance materials and armors for various industries.
By using nanometer-carbon struts, the new material has been shown to have impressive toughness and mechanical robustness. The material was tested by firing microparticles at supersonic speeds to see how it deforms -- quite well, it turns out.
The material is less than a width of a human hair, but still able to prevent the tiny, high-speed particles from penetrating it. According to the researchers behind the project, when compared with steel Kevlar, aluminum rother impact-resistant materials of comparable weight, the new nanotech armor outperforms them all.
“The same amount of mass of our material would be much more efficient at stopping a projectile than the same amount of mass of Kevlar,” declares the study’s lead author, Carlos Portela, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at MIT.
This could potentially mean that when produced on a larger scale, the new material should be able to provide a very tough, lightweight, alternative to more conventional impact-resistant materials (lie Kevlar or steel plate).
Screenshot of high-speed camera footage of high-speed particle speeding towards the target material. Source: MIT
“The knowledge from this work… could provide design principles for ultra-lightweight impact-resistant materials [for use in] efficient armor materials, protective coatings, and blast-resistant shields desirable in defense and space applications,” added the study's co-author Julia R. Greer, a professor of materials science, mechanics, and medical engineering at Caltech.
This new nanotech armor is potentially tougher than Kevlar but much lighter
To test the toughness of their new material, engineers decided to bombard it with supersonic particles and study how it reacted. This was first conducted at Caltech who used a piece of the nanomaterial fabricated using two-photon lithography to make a tetrakaidecahedron (a lattice configuration composed of microscopic struts).
This structure, the study authors note, has historically been used in energy-absorbing foams. The reasoning behind this is that carbon is normally pretty brittle, but this 3D structure should provide it with the flexibility needed to deform rapidly without completely breaking.
Once fabricated, the material was washed to remove leftover resin and it was then baked in a high-temperature vacuum furnace to convert the polymer into an ultralight, nanostructure of pure carbon.
With the material ready, it was subjected to high-energy impacts of 14-micron-wide silicon oxide bullet-like particles. The particles were accelerated to supersonic speeds using lasers focussed through a gold- and silicon oxide-coated glass slide.
This process results in the generation of plasma from the gold with pushes particles of the silicon oxide out in the direction of the laser -- very rapidly. This setup allowed the researchers to precisely control the speed of the fired microparticles so that they could test speeds of between 89.5 mph (40 meters per second) to 2,461 mph (1,100 meters per second).
For reference, the speed of sound is 761 mph (about 340 meters per second) at sea level.
The impacts were captured using high-speed cameras and the results carefully studied to see how the material reacted. Using two different densities, they found that the more dense variant (with thicker struts) was more resilient and particles tended to embed within the material rather than tear through it.
Using high-speed cameras, the team was able to study how the material reacted to high-speed impacts. Source: MIT
Through further study, including sectioning, they found that they could even predict how the material will react using the Buckingham-Π theorem that is normally used to study meteor impacts.
In the future, the team hopes to use their findings to predict the impact resilience of other nano-architectured materials and configurations as well as other materials beyond carbon.
“Nanoarchitected materials truly are promising as impact-mitigating materials,” Portela says. “There’s a lot we don’t know about them yet, and we’re starting this path to answering these questions and opening the door to their widespread applications.”
This research was supported, in part, by the U.S. Office of Naval Research, the Vannevar Bush Faculty Fellowship, and the U.S. Army Research Office through the Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies at MIT.
You can read the original research paper in the journal Nature Materials.
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