Transcript preview
Open
Kind: captions Language: en this metal is about as close to Magic as it is possible to find in nature I just don't get it it can adjust its arrangement of atoms to return to some predefined shape but it also converts between mechanical and thermal energy and it can stretch up to 30 times more than an ordinary metal and still spring back to its original size I can feel it in my hand shrinking back because of these unique properties it's being used in everything from Medical devices to toys to bulletproof bike tires go and it's allowing NASA to reinvent the wheel for space exploration this is the bones of a the bones of the tire the bones of the tire is a slinky so basically this is the the slinky applied to the rim you just wrapped a slinky around a rim yeah it doesn't get any simpler than that right here is a a bicycle that has slinkies inside a polymer if you look inside there this tire does not require air pressure to work the structure and shock absorption are all provided by that metal Slinky so that's like around 100 PSI or what a normal road bike would feel like which means you should be able to puncture it with no loss of performance so we're going to drive it over a bed of nails but first we'll test a traditional pneumatic tire just to make sure these nails are Sharp another puncture another flat tire this one kind of expected so now I'm going to put these airless tires to the test driving over the same bed of nails here we [Applause] go I heard a lot of Pops I must have hit some Nails I don't feel anything different still rides well going to get up some speed and G that's definitely a nail like the nail broke in it why is it that's what it looks like Yeah The Nails in the tire we're now going to try to shoot a bullet into the tire and see what happens 3 2 1 there it is there it is look at that wow it's just it's a really clean shot straight through yep barely even see the mark on the tire looks like this one actually hit the hit the uh alloy yep it does to me yeah that's what it feels like you can see we spliced off some of the bullet before we even got to the cardboard how's it ride yeah no problems bulletproof bicycle this bulletproof bike tire actually comes out of NASA's Research into making wheels for space missions it is really hard to make good wheels for other planets I mean a lot of the places we want to send Rovers to there is no or very low atmospheric pressure we can't use rubber pneumatic tires because of the extreme conditions on the moon and Mars there's no confining pressure outside of it it could basically explode besides with temperatures dropping to extreme lows rubber becomes brittle if the were a a flag pole the temperature facing the sun would be 250° fah above zero in the shadow is 250° below zero let's uh put some rubber on the moon 90 is the glass transition temperature it's when the polymer goes from being flexible to a rigid element this is what happens when you dip rubber in liquid nitrogen [Music] that's why you can't send rubber to the moon this is why almost all the wheels used for exploring other planets have been made of hard metal this is actually a spare for the Curiosity Rover made out of aluminum a single Billet that gets machined down so you don't have to worry about Fasteners or welds or anything like that that could potentially be a failure point but with it being so expensive to launch matter into space the wheels have to be as lightweight as possible it's it's lightish but it's still heavy to meet those Mass limitations they made this skin7 mm thick thinner than a credit card yep these structural members here which we also call grousers they're there to give the wheel strength but also help grab onto obstacles and and help grab the soil the problem is that because this rub is so large and heavy and the terrain is just so aggressive and nasty they're actually seeing much higher Peak loads kind of focused on areas between these Growers than what was predicted and this is the actual condition of the wheels on Mars right now and as you can see got big holes and cracks where those skin where that skin was now the wheel still operates hasn't immobilized the Rover it's still going to complete its Mission but it does affect where it can go and how how efficient it is when you apply a force to a material that is known as a stress and what you're really doing is tugging on all the atoms inside the object and as a result their spacing changes a little bit and so the material deforms for example if you pull on an object it will get slightly longer and the per unit change in length is called strain now for most materials under low stresses strain is directly proportional to the stress applied mean the more you stress it the more it stretches and the material is elastic if you remove the stress the object goes back to its original size so no atoms have moved around and no bonds have been broken or formed you've just made them Flex when you applied that stress but if the stress applied exceeds the yield strength of the material well then this strain is so great that the atoms can't maintain their positions relative to each other defects called Edge dislocations can move through the material the atoms are actually rearranging themselves and so the deformation is not reversible it's plastic deformation so the object won't go back to its original shape when the stress is removed if enough stress is applied the material can completely fracture in the worst case scenario this results in Holes like in the Mars rover Wheels which reduced their performance and ultimately could jeopardize the mission ordinary metals can withstand a strain of only around3 to 8% elastically any more than that and they undergo plastic deformation so they won't return to their original shape ultimately they could even fracture there go right yeah and you kinked it too kinked it and stretched it that's why every component of a space vehicle is designed never to stretch more than that3 to 8% but that's a significant limitation there is a different type of wheel that NASA has tried in space which are those on the Apollo lunar roving vehicle or lrv that particular structure that they built is something that we call a panograph all it is is it's a set of wires that have been over under over under woven and this this on the surface here to get grip also to strengthen it's primarily to to ensure that the tire does not sink into the ground so they did some studies with these tread strips to figure out how much coverage they needed and so they they found out that roughly 50% was enough to keep the tire kind of floating on the surface and still uh maintain that flexibility the lunar roving vehicle Wheels worked well for the short distance Journeys traveled on the Moon I mean the farthest this vehicle ever went was 36 km but still these wheels needed to be designed to minimize plastic deformation of the steel mesh and so they put put this internal structure inside there we call it a bump stop so as they hit a bump and this is deformed when it hits that it stops the deoration to keep it just below that proportional limit where they would induce plasticity this wheel was good enough for the short Apollo missions but for longer Journeys a bump stop won't be enough to prevent plastic deformation building up over time mesh steel wheels have been tried on Earth but their performance does degrade over time this was the Mars steel Spring tire we we made and drove on that same test rig and there's no fracture but you see a lot of permanent deformation there what we need is a material that is strong and durable like steel but which can endure much more strain without deforming permanently and that is where this stuff comes in in 1961 the naval ordinance laboratory was doing experiments with different Alloys involving nickel and titanium a sample that had been repeatedly worked heated and cooled was shown to one of the associate technical directors who just happened to be a pipe smoker so he decided to see what the sample would do if he applied a bit of heat from his lighter and when he did that he found that the material changed shape this shocked everyone and led to more investigations into the material which became known as nanl for its components nickel and titanium and for the naval ordinance laboratory where it was discovered so why did n andol change shape it's really because the Ally can undergo a phase change in the solid state in heated NL the atoms are arranged in a cubic lattice Arrangement and this phase is known as tinite but upon cooling the atoms ease into a form known as twined Martin site it's a Messier lower symmetry arrangement of the atoms and in this phase you can apply stress to the material and deform it but unlike in an ordinary metal this deformation is not causing bonds between atoms to break and Edge dislocations moving throughout the material now in this case the crystal structure is changing once again to a detwinned form of Martin site and now when you heat it back up the material goes from Martin site back to being austinite which means all the atoms go back to their original locations and so the material returns to its original shape we can basically set this shape as the parent known memory shape that's why we call it shape memory I can stretch this out I could if I cooled it down I could stretch it out even more but as soon as I heat it back up it'll remember that original Parent shape and that's why night andol is considered a shape memory alloy the shape is set at high temperature when the material is in the tinite phase then as the material is cooled down it undergos a phase transition into twined Martin site if stress is now applied to the material in this phase it can be extensively deformed by changing the crystal structure into detwinned Martin site when the stress is released most of that deformation remains but when the sample is heated the atoms return to the tinite phase which Returns the material to its original shape [Laughter] it's like you're barely in the water no and it's just as fast as you can conduct heat to it or get heat away from it who whoa I mean that's cool this is the property of night all that most people are aware of and one that makes it useful for a lot of applications so that's a stint they slightly cool these down right below to Martin site and then they crush it or elongate it so you can see it gets real thin and then they put in a catheter and that catheter goes through the body to the place where they want to deploy the stent and then upon deploying it it bounces right back increasing that outer diameter and opening that artery nightl is absolutely perfect for that shape memory allo can actually generate significant forces when they're heated which means they can also be used as actuators you're going to see a huge amount of force and stress build up in the wire which we can see with here which how much it's pulling 6 lb 7 you can really see it Contracting there 13 15 16 17 20 lb oh it's lifting it that's about 90 Newtons of force scientists have even used shape memory Alloys to fracture a rock shape memory Alloys are being investigated for use in aviation I made a video before about Vortex generators which are these little fins that stick up out of the wing of a plane to trip the air flow into turbulence this is important for takeoff and Landing to keep the flow attached to the wing so you don't stall but when you're up at cruise and you don't need need those vortices being generated you want these to Stow because they're a drag penalty as the plane just climbs from takeoff to cruise we go from some temperature on the ground round to something close to -50 -60 C at Cru the alloy is designed in between those so that we can just take advantage of the ambient temperature change that happens in the environment when we cool this one down no controller no operator it autonomously STS flat the temperature at which the material transitions between austinite and Martin site can be tuned to be anywhere between -50 to positive 3 50° C this is done by changing the ratio of the elements and using different heat treatments and then as that would heat back up coming into landing comes right back up this principle has been extended to operate the main flaps on an aircraft now the heating and cooling is not passive but controlled by a heating element so we've done demonstrations where you have a 737 aircraft and no hydraulic actuators on the wing box all we have is a shuttle mechanism that's driven by two tubes of nightl and we've driven those aons and flap elements on the wing box of a 737 in Flight 60° flap angle down 30° flap angle up just by Heating and Cooling two tubes of night and all replaces all the Hydraulics the shape memory effect is the main thing people know about materials like n andol but they have another unique property which makes them ideal for making durable wheels and you're just going to take it and you're going to Loop it a couple times around your hand like that and you're just going to pull on that wire and feel 6 to 8% strain in a piece of metal oh that's really weird that's 6 to 8% strain which you can't do in other wires right but what's weird about it is that it feels a little crunchy it it feel cuz you're feeling all of the reorientations oh so weird so cool though right yes very cool can you hear that yeah how weird is that that pinging is 20 shape memory Alloys can stretch up to 8% of their length and still spring back to their original size this property is known as super elasticity or pseudo elasticity but they're kind of misnomers because the material is not actually operating in its elastic regime what's actually happening is that this NL is in the austinite phase its transition temperature is lower than room temperature but by applying a stress even with no temperature change you can force the crystal structure to change from tinite into detwinned Martin site and this rearrangement allows the nanl to deform by that 8% and still it'll snap back to its original configuration once the stress is removed and the atoms return to the tinite phase that sound you're hearing is the material undergoing a stressinduced phase change in the solid state if you want to think about it on a stress strain curve now this transformation is occurring entirely above the Martin site transition temperature so the material starts off in the tinite phase and then the applied stress is what induces the phase change from austinite to detwinned Martin site and when that stress is removed the atoms spring back to the ight phase and so the material goes back to its original size and shape If This Were a normal tube I would bend it to here and it would plasticize if it was a brass tube which you know has a plastic buckling mode it would go like this and it would actually Buckle the wall I would never take my hands and bend them like this and have it completely return to shape at the bend the nightl is transforming from austinite to Martin site and back when we go from the higher symmetry phase the tinite to the lower symmetry daughter phase which one is it exothermic or endothermic I feel like that should be exothermic good job Science Guy if you were to put your hand around this tube you'll actually feel the heat energy the enthalpy of that transformation evolving as heat you ready yep oh yeah that's real hot oh ooh oh that that actually is like burning like I can't keep my hand on no keep your hand on it it won't burn you that's when the stress is removed and the material goes back to being tinite that phase change is endothermic it absorbs heat right it's like you could use that for a refrigerator so the it's exactly right so another area where these materials are being applied is in a field called elasto calorics where we use this transformation to do things equivalent to heat pumping I want to shoot this with our thermal camera we got a Fleer with us how's that this dissipation potential can act a little bit like the dissipation in the shock absorber right so the tire itself could actually perform some of that dissipation potential on its own it almost acts as a damper right to get rid of that energy loss so then your your tire actually has a potential of becoming a complete suspension system which obviously really simplifies building vehicles for for space the original Tire when I put load on it okay you can see I'm only transferring a load from the footprint to this little section of the tire right by tying these this Bump Stop element to here when I go through a footprint you can see now I'm transferring load 360° around the tire right by by doing that I have now increased my load carrying capacity significantly without adding any more mass so to make a tire out of shape memory alloy they weave night andol Springs together into a mesh it's a pretty tedious and timec consuming process so you're going to take it like so yep you're going to grab both ends no and now take it you're not take it and screw it in oh my my goodness are you kidding me is this what you do every day 684 times 684 times per tire but will these wheels work on Rovers on the moon and Mars well they test the wheels extensively on a rotating Carousel of different terrain types from Sand to small rocks to bigger rocks so the terrain endurance rig basically consists of a a circular Carousel that is independently driven the wheel tire assembly is also independently driven so we can create a force slip condition so we can drive with zero slip and this is about how slow a Mars Rover would be traveling average speed is about 6.7 cm/s that's a nominal speed they don't go too fast all right I'm going to go walk on simulated Moon reguli it looks like beach and it feels like beach this side is meant to simulate the surface of the Moon and this side is meant to be the surface of Mars it is uh very sinky sand wheel is rolling along Rolling Along hits a rock and I'm I just am I pushing into it or do I want to get it on top I'd say get on top and just put all your body weight onto it that's basically my full weight on it the shape memory alloy is strong enough to support the weight of a vehicle or vehicle and crew but it's also incredibly flexible so it can deform up to 8% without being permanently damaged and that's what's needed for long space missions so that's a pretty good amount of deoration right that's a great amount of deformation and still not Beyond 8% it's so gooey it's just walking back to the car after the beach tricky for a Rover right but these tires won't just be for space they're also looking at terrestrial applications most aircraft the tires on those aircraft they have to be pressurized to really really high pressurizations 300 400 PSI not the conventional 30 to 60 PSI you do in a car or truck tire right we have issues where at those huge pressure pressurizations they can explode the other construct is is maintenance right so if I'm a pneumatic tire and I'm relying on that pneumatics for the performance of the system I have to always be checking the air pressure to make sure that I'm at the right inflation pressure so that I'm not burning too much fuel or I'm not at a place where I could potentially pop a tire because of the loads by going to a structural system that doesn't rely on air and is designed specifically for the application all of those things go away they've tested one on a Jeep since it doesn't rely on pressurized air for support you just can't get a flat tire plus it can never be underinflated which significantly improves fuel economy with a metal that works like magic you can make airless tires that will take us off-road on road into the air and across other worlds [Applause] NASA's night and all tires are designed to last the entire lifetime of a rover mission even on a rough terrain of Mars but here on Earth few products last a lifetime from bike tires to phones to toothbrushes pretty much everything wears out but with Hensen shaving the sponsor of this video you may never need to buy another razor again in your life Henson actually came out of an aerospace machine machine shop that built parts for the Mars rover and the ISS so they are experts in precise highquality work if the temperature to manufacture their Rover parts changed as little as one degree they had to scrap the entire piece and that sort of precision is overlooked by most razor manufacturers in a typical razor the blades flex and bend when they make contact with the skin and this movement causes micro Cuts leading to skin irritation and razor bumps to many people this is just an inevitable part of Shaving but it doesn't need to be if you want advice about a good razor trust a guy with a beard this is Henson's al13 razor it's so precise that the blade extends past the shave plane by exactly 0013 in that's less than the width of a human hair the blade is also securely fastened at exactly 30° leaving almost zero blade Flex for a smoother and cleaner shave this razor is designed to last a lifetime and its standard double-edged blades cost only around 10 cents each which means the cost of ownership for an al13 razor ends up lower than most cartridge or electric razors after only two years and besides price considerations having one razor for the rest of your life is both more convenient and better for the planet so if you want one Aerospace quality razor to last the rest of your life go to Hensen shaving veritasium and enter code veritasium for 100 free blades with the purchase of a razor that's 2 to 4 years worth of blades on me make sure to add both the razor and the blades to your cart for the code to take effect so I want to thank hints and shaving for sponsoring this video and I want to thank you for watching
Resume
Categories