University of Rochester researchers, inspired by diving bell spiders and rafts of fire ants, have created a metallic structure that is so water repellant, it refuses to sink -- no matter how often it is punctured.
Could this lead to:
• An unsinkable ship?
• A wearable flotation device that will still float after being punctured?
• Electronic monitoring devices that can survive long term in the ocean?
All of the above, says Chunlei Guo, professor of optics and physics, whose lab describes the structure in ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces.
The structure uses a groundbreaking technique the lab developed for using femtosecond bursts of lasers to “etch“ the surfaces of metals with intricate micro- and nanoscale patterns that trap air and make the surfaces super-hydrophobic (water repellent).
The researchers found, however, that after being immersed in water for long periods of time, the surfaces may start to lose their hydrophobic properties.
Enter the spiders and fire ants, which can survive long per
1 view
1160
412
4 months ago 00:06:11 1
URSA - PRIMORDIAL CROWN (Live video clip)
1 year ago 00:01:14 3
Unsinkable Metal
2 years ago 00:57:15 1
Trespass - Wolf At The Door (2023)
3 years ago 00:00:22 58
Unsinkable Disk IYPT2022
4 years ago 00:55:30 7
Marianas Rest - Ruins (FULL ALBUM 2019) Melodic Death/Doom Metal
5 years ago 00:01:17 73
Soaking up the sun with laser treated metal
5 years ago 00:06:40 1
Scientist Explains How Unsinkable Metal Works | WIRED