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Hardest nano-plastic is also lightest
Hardest nano-plastic is also lightest
New Delhi,DH News Service:
The world's hardest plastic nano-composite material that can be used in missiles and aeroplanes has been discovered by a team of five Bangalore researchers headed by CNR Rao, scientific advisor to the Prime Minister.
They created the material by reinforcing ordinary plastic with diamonds which are invisible to naked eye, a sheet of layered carbon and tiny carbon cylinders.
For the reinforcement they used materials of nano-dimension, which means smaller than the width of a single strand of human hair. One nano-metre is one millionth of a millimetre.
Strengthening a common polymer with nano-diamond, a new age material called graphene (one atom thick carbon honeycomb sheet) and carbon nano tube has produced this material with extra hardness and stiffness.
The mechanical properties like hardness and stiffness (after moulding) improved by as much as 400 per cent compared to those obtained with single reinforcements, the researchers reported in the Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences.
The team comprises researchers from Indian Institute of Science and Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research. The original idea came from Rao an eminent scientist and founding president of the JNCASR.
Though Rao was not available for comment, Upadrasta Rammurthy, a professor of material engineering at IISc and one of the team members told Deccan Herald that despite its hardness the material is extremely light-weight.
It can be used in missile and aerospace engineering. However, we have not yet looked into the application side, he said.
While scientists do use nano-materials as reinforcing agents, the Bangalore team has adopted a new strategy by using a combination two nano-materials. The polymer they chose is polyvinyl alcohol.
Winning combinations
They hit upon two winning combinations graphene and nano-diamond; and carbon nano tubes and nano-diamond. Both combinations result into development of high-performance polymer matrix composite. High performance comes from the synergy between polymer and nano-materials.
The synergy shows one plus one can become eleven also and need not necessarily be two always, Ramamurthy said quoting a phrase often used by Rao.
Despite being the worlds hardest plastic nano-composite, the reinforcement material constitutes only one per cent (by weight) of the composite.
To create a similar material conventionally, 50-60 per cent glass was required as the reinforcing agent and the resultant composite could not be moulded.
Besides excellent mechanical properties, the reinforced polymer also shows semi-conducting behaviour, which could also be exploited.
However, researchers are yet to analyse the new materials toughness and ductility, without which the extent of practical application could not be decided.
Hardest nano-plastic is also lightest
New Delhi,DH News Service:
The world's hardest plastic nano-composite material that can be used in missiles and aeroplanes has been discovered by a team of five Bangalore researchers headed by CNR Rao, scientific advisor to the Prime Minister.
They created the material by reinforcing ordinary plastic with diamonds which are invisible to naked eye, a sheet of layered carbon and tiny carbon cylinders.
For the reinforcement they used materials of nano-dimension, which means smaller than the width of a single strand of human hair. One nano-metre is one millionth of a millimetre.
Strengthening a common polymer with nano-diamond, a new age material called graphene (one atom thick carbon honeycomb sheet) and carbon nano tube has produced this material with extra hardness and stiffness.
The mechanical properties like hardness and stiffness (after moulding) improved by as much as 400 per cent compared to those obtained with single reinforcements, the researchers reported in the Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences.
The team comprises researchers from Indian Institute of Science and Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research. The original idea came from Rao an eminent scientist and founding president of the JNCASR.
Though Rao was not available for comment, Upadrasta Rammurthy, a professor of material engineering at IISc and one of the team members told Deccan Herald that despite its hardness the material is extremely light-weight.
It can be used in missile and aerospace engineering. However, we have not yet looked into the application side, he said.
While scientists do use nano-materials as reinforcing agents, the Bangalore team has adopted a new strategy by using a combination two nano-materials. The polymer they chose is polyvinyl alcohol.
Winning combinations
They hit upon two winning combinations graphene and nano-diamond; and carbon nano tubes and nano-diamond. Both combinations result into development of high-performance polymer matrix composite. High performance comes from the synergy between polymer and nano-materials.
The synergy shows one plus one can become eleven also and need not necessarily be two always, Ramamurthy said quoting a phrase often used by Rao.
Despite being the worlds hardest plastic nano-composite, the reinforcement material constitutes only one per cent (by weight) of the composite.
To create a similar material conventionally, 50-60 per cent glass was required as the reinforcing agent and the resultant composite could not be moulded.
Besides excellent mechanical properties, the reinforced polymer also shows semi-conducting behaviour, which could also be exploited.
However, researchers are yet to analyse the new materials toughness and ductility, without which the extent of practical application could not be decided.