Nitinol
– Shape Memory Alloy
Remember the
Terminator movies with the T-1000? They called it a mnemetic
polyalloy. It was supposed to be made up of little nano machines that
mimicked living cells, and could copy any shape it was programmed to.
Well, it turns out
that is not too far from the truth. There is an alloy called nitinol,
which is a combination of nickel and titanium, (with a variant being
nickel, titanium, osmium and lanthanum), and it can be “programmed”
to return to a specific shape on reaching a certain temperature that
is determined through the proportion of nickel to titanium. For
example, you can have a stent that reinforces an artery programmed to
actuate at the temperature of the blood, and crush the stent so it is
easily maneuvered into place, and once it is there, the temperature
of the blood causes it to regain its programmed shape.
But it gets better!
It turns out that it needs energy to do this, and in order to return
to that shape, it draws extra energy from the environment. So it
“eats” energy in order to shape shift—just like a living
organism eats food to do what it is programmed to do, such as a
bacterium or similar life form. So is nitinol, which is also called
“bio-metal” really alive? Not really, as one of the requirements
is reproduction, which so far it cannot do yet. But it is close. The
metal grain structure resembles living cells, even though it cannot
come close to living tissue. But it can be considered “nano tech”,
as it is programmable from a molecular level. So even though
nano-tech remains in the sci-fi realm, this one if very real, and has
been with us since at least 1961.
So why are we not
using it yet? Well we are, but the alloy is expensive, as it is not
mass produced. The argument is that titanium is the culprit, and is
horribly expensive. However, this is not the case either, as titanium
dioxide is the base of white paint, having replaced the more toxic
white lead. If their argument were true, then it would cost $100 per
gallon to paint your ceiling. What is more likely is what we are
looking at is an artificially inflated price for technology that
“they” do not want us to use. Another point is that some
researchers are finding out that the “energy eating” aspect of
nitinol has a bizarre quality to it that is over unity, and it seems
to lower the surrounding temp to do work, instead of the other way
around. Some are saying it is negentropic, and has an efficiency way
over 100%.
Whatever the case,
this material is fascinating to work or play with, and will prove to
be a valuable asset in the future, as it can replace hydraulic
actuators without having to worry about pumps and leaky plumbing. In
fact, it is so powerful it has been estimated to produce up to 20,000
pounds to the square inch of force, way beyond what hydraulic
actuators could possibly produce without blowing seals in the
process. It is being used in robotics, surgery for implants—as the
body does not reject the alloy—and in plumbing for anti-scald
shower heads and valves. The actual number of applications are
staggering, as it can replace anything that actuator motors or
hydraulics can do. The alternative energy applications are possible
as well, as motors that can run on waste heat as a co-generation
power plant.
I predict we will be
seeing much more of this in the future, as the economics cannot be
suppressed forever, and once it is “turned loose”, we will see
amazing things with this material, such as boats that can be stored
in a backpack with ice, and then when thrown into a river,
self-actuates into a usable boat, or camping gear that self-actuates
such as a tent with a small jolt of current from a solar-charged
battery.
The applications are
only limited by the imagination.
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