| March
7, 2005
Researcher Describes New Type Of
Strong, Lightweight Metallic Material
By Rex Graham
An engineering
professor at UCSD has described in the March issue of JOM
(the Journal of the Minerals, Metals and Materials Society)
the unique properties of a new type of metallic laminate that
can serve as armor and as a replacement for beryllium, a strong
but toxic metal commonly used in demanding aerospace applications.
|
| The
laminate performed spectacularly in depth-of-penetration
ballistics tests, but its greatest potential may derive
from its ability to be tailored to meet specific engineering
requirements. |
“The new material
we developed is environmentally safe, and while its stiffness
equals that of steel, it’s only half as dense,”
said Kenneth S. Vecchio, author of the paper and a professor
of mechanical and aerospace engineering in UCSD’s Jacobs
School of Engineering. “It performs spectacularly in our
depth-of-penetration ballistics tests, but we think its greatest
potential may derive from its unique ability to have its structure
and properties tailored to meet a wide variety of application-specific
engineering requirements.”
The new material is
made primarily of two lightweight metals. Vecchio alternated
layers of aluminum and titanium alloy foils, and compressed
and heated them in an inexpensive energy-conserving process.
The resulting reaction generated a laminate with two layers:
a hard ceramic-like “intermetallic” layer of titanium
aluminide, and a pliable layer of residual titanium alloy. The
layers can be stacked like 1-millimeter-thick pages of a book,
and even contoured into desired shapes prior to heating.
The laminate architecture
was chosen by Vecchio to mimic the internal structure of the
tough shell of the red abalone. This science-mimicking-biology
approach is one of an increasing number of biomimetic research
efforts at the Jacobs School of Engineering. Faculty members
are studying structural and functional designs of everything
from mollusk shells and bird bills to sea urchin spines and
other biocomposites in the development of new smart materials
and devices.
The red abalone, a
seaweed-eating snail prized as a source of mother-of-pearl jewelry,
is found off the coast of California. The mollusk makes its
dome-shaped home by slowly adding layers of brittle calcium
carbonate, each about one-thousandth the thickness of a strand
of human hair, between even thinner layers of a stretchy protein
adhesive.
“The intermetallic
phase of titanium aluminide is the complement of the mollusk’s
hard calcium carbonate phase, and the titanium alloy layer mimics
the abalone shell’s compliant protein layers,” said
Vecchio.
In order to test the
bullet-stopping capability of his new material, Vecchio fired
a heavy tungsten alloy rod into a three-quarters-inch (2 centimeters)
thick sample at a velocity of about 2,000 mph (900 meters per
second). The rod penetrated only half the thickness of the test
sample. Vecchio said the laminate performs surprisingly well
as armor and has potential as a structural metal.
He said other types
of metallic foils containing vanadium, chromium, manganese,
nickel, cobalt, and iron have been successfully fabricated into
laminates using the same stacked foil technique. “We’ve
only begun to explore the possible combinations and potential
uses of these promising new materials,” said Vecchio.
He described in his
paper the production of cavities within his laminate layers,
which were made by cutting out parts of the foil prior to heating.
In one case, he filled cavities with steel beads, which were
free to bounce within their confines and act as highly efficient
vibration dampeners. “This vibration-dampening characteristic
could be extremely valuable in jet engines and other high-performance
applications prone to noisy vibration,” said Vecchio.
It’s also possible
to include electrical pathways within the laminates by embedding
metal or ceramic wires or fibers during fabrication, and those
components could both strengthen the material and act as built-in
sensors. In addition, Vecchio said the laminates could be further
enhanced with the addition of materials that generate an electric
charge when mechanically deformed. Conversely, these so-called
piezoelectric materials also deform when an electric field is
applied to them.
Media Contact: Rex
Graham, (858) 822-3075
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