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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2007
March
Technique
creates metal memory and could lead to vanishing dents
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Taher
Saif, a professor of mechanical science and engineering,
holds a piezo actuated
stage for nanoscale material studies in scanning
electron microscopes. Graduate students
Jong Han, left, and Jagannathan Rajagopalan explored
aluminum films and gold films. |
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Released
3/29/07
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Crumpled kitchen foil that lays flat for reuse. Bent bumpers that straighten
overnight. Dents in car doors that disappear when heated with a hairdryer.
These and other physical feats may become possible with a technique
to make memory metals discovered by researchers at the University of
Illinois.
Normally, when a piece of metal – such as a paperclip –
is bent, the change in shape becomes permanent. But, when heat is added
to bent metal films having the right microstructure, the researchers
found, the films return to their original shapes. The higher the temperature,
the sooner the metal films revert.
“It’s as though the metal has a memory of where it came
from,” said Taher A. Saif, a professor of mechanical
science and engineering at Illinois, and senior author of a paper
that describes the findings in the March 30 issue of the journal Science.
In the study, Saif and graduate students Jagannathan Rajagopalan and
Jong H. Han explored aluminum films and gold films. The aluminum films
were 200 nanometers thick, 50-60 microns wide and 300-360 microns long.
The gold films were 200 nanometers thick, 12-20 microns wide and 185
microns long. The average grain size in the aluminum films was 65 nanometers;
in the gold films, 50 nanometers.
“We found that the type of metal doesn’t matter, said Saif,
who also is a Willett Faculty Scholar and a researcher at the university’s
Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory.
“What matters is the size of the grains in the metal’s crystalline
microstructure, and a distribution in the size.”
If the grains are uniformly too small, the metal will be brittle and
break while being bent. If the grains are uniformly too large, the metal
will bend, but then stay in that position. To return to the initial
shape, what’s needed is a balance between brittleness and malleability.
That balance can be achieved through a combination of small and large
grains, the researchers report.
Variations in the microstructure lead to plastic deformation in the
larger grains and elastic accommodations in the smaller grains, Saif
said. The bigger grains bend, but push and pull on the smaller grains,
which become elastically deformed like a spring.
If the metal is then left alone, the smaller grains will release this
energy and force the bigger grains back to their original shapes over
time. This local release of energy can be speeded up by applying heat.
Controlling the crystalline microstructure of thin films also could
reduce energy loss in oscillators and resonators used in electronic
circuits, Saif said. Oscillators and resonators are found in products
ranging from air bag sensors and camcorders to digital projectors and
global positioning systems.
“If the grains that constitute the metal films in these devices
are between 50 and 100 nanometers, they can be very lossy,” Saif
said. “However, if we decrease the grain size, we can reduce much
of the energy loss.”
The work was funded by the National Science Foundation.
Editor’s note: To reach Taher Saif, call 217-333-8552; e-mail: saif@uiuc.edu.
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