• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

A Self-Healing Metal Has Been Discovered For The First Time

August 3, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

A metal that fills in cracks in itself without human intervention could be the key to making self-healing machines and infrastructure that could save trillions in repairs and maintenance. Things get more alarming if you think about applying it to robots, but maybe we’re there already. 

Metallic parts develop small cracks under repeated stress, known as metal fatigue. Over time this makes them more vulnerable to eventually breaking, often catastrophically. The solutions are obvious: use alloys that take longer to crack or replace parts more often. 

Advertisement

However, Dr Brad Boyce of Sandia National Laboratories has a third solution – have the metal fill in the cracks before they become a problem. He’s now demonstrated that this can be done, albeit so far only on a very small scale.

“This was absolutely stunning to watch first-hand,” Boyce said in a statement. “What we have confirmed is that metals have their own intrinsic, natural ability to heal themselves, at least in the case of fatigue damage at the nanoscale,”

Self-healing materials exist, but so far these have mostly been plastics or concrete; certainly not metals. Heat can fill cracks in, but applying it conflicts with the self part of self-healing. “Cracks in metals were only ever expected to get bigger, not smaller,” Boyce said. That’s certainly what textbooks say. “Even some of the basic equations we use to describe crack growth preclude the possibility of such healing processes,”

The idea that such decay was not inevitable was first published by Professor Michael Demkowicz of Texas A&M University in 2013. At the time, however, it was purely theoretical, resulting from computer simulations. It’s taken almost 10 years to prove it can really happen, but this wasn’t a case of experimentalists doggedly trying to turn Demkowicz’s ideas into reality.

Advertisement

“We certainly weren’t looking for it,” Boyce said.

Visiting scientists were using Sandia’s facilities to observe how nanoscale cracks form in platinum when the ends were pulled at a frequency of 200 Hz. For the first 40 minutes, cracks formed as expected, but then 18 nanometers of a crack filled in, before regrowing in another direction. They call the process “crack flank cold welding induced by a combination of local stress state and grain boundary migration.”

Sandia National Laboratories researcher Ryan Schoell uses a specialized transmission electron microscope technique developed by Khalid Hattar, Dan Bufford and Chris Barr to study fatigue cracks at the nanoscale.

Ryan Schoell uses Sandia National Laboratories specialized transmission electron microscope technique developed by Khalid Hattar, Dan Bufford, and Chris Barr to study nanoscale fatigue cracks.

Image Credit: Craig Fritz, Sandia National Laboratories

Boyce was aware of Demkowicz’s work and informed him. Demkowicz created a computer model to match what had been done, and confirmed this was an example of the phenomenon he predicted.

So long as the behavior is restricted to platinum, it’s obviously not relevant to bulk applications, such as crumbling bridges or airplane engines. However, Boyce said: “The extent to which these findings are generalizable will likely become a subject of extensive research.” Moreover, for small precision instruments that are hard to replace, for example on space missions, even platinum might be worth the price.

Advertisement

The scale of the problem metal fatigue causes is so vast that even affecting a small portion could make an extraordinary difference. “In structural applications, fatigue accounts for up to 90 percent of in-service failure,” the discoverers write. 

“My hope is that this finding will encourage materials researchers to consider that, under the right circumstances, materials can do things we never expected,” Demkowicz said. 

The findings are published in Nature. 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Israeli minister says Iran giving militias drone training near Isfahan
  2. French watchdog chief calls for ban on ‘payment for order flow’ in EU stock market
  3. What Would Happen To Humanity If All Microbes Suddenly Disappeared?
  4. IFLScience The Big Questions: How Is Climate Change Affecting Polar Bear Populations?

Source Link: A Self-Healing Metal Has Been Discovered For The First Time

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • For Only The Second Recorded Time, Two Novae Are Visible With The Naked Eye At Once
  • Long-Lost Ancient Egyptian City Ruled By Cobra Goddess Discovered In Nile Delta
  • Much Maligned Norwegian Lemming Is One Of The Newest Mammal Species On Earth
  • Where Are The Real Geographical Centers Of All The Continents?
  • New Species Of South African Rain Frog Discovered, And It’s Absolutely Fuming About It
  • Love Cheese But Hate Nightmares? Bad News, It Looks Like The Two Really Are Related
  • Project Hail Mary Trailer First Look: What Would Happen If The Sun Got Darker?
  • Newly Discovered Cell Structure Might Hold Key To Understanding Devastating Genetic Disorders
  • What Is Kakeya’s Needle Problem, And Why Do We Want To Solve It?
  • “I Wasn’t Prepared For The Sheer Number Of Them”: Cave Of Mummified Never-Before-Seen Eyeless Invertebrates Amazes Scientists
  • Asteroid Day At 10: How The World Is More Prepared Than Ever To Face Celestial Threats
  • What Happened When A New Zealand Man Fell Butt-First Onto A Powerful Air Hose
  • Ancient DNA Confirms Women’s Unexpected Status In One Of The Oldest Known Neolithic Settlements
  • Earth’s Weather Satellites Catch Cloud Changes… On Venus
  • Scientists Find Common Factors In People Who Have “Out-Of-Body” Experiences
  • Shocking Photos Reveal Extent Of Overfishing’s Impact On “Shrinking” Cod
  • Direct Fusion Drive Could Take Us To Sedna During Its Closest Approach In 11,000 Years
  • Earth’s Energy Imbalance Is More Than Double What It Should Be – And We Don’t Know Why
  • We May Have Misjudged A Fundamental Fact About The Cambrian Explosion
  • The Shoebill Is A Bird So Bizarre That Some People Don’t Even Believe It’s Real
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version