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Snake
27 October 2007, 17:19
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7038686.stm

Super-strong body armour in sight
By Paul Rincon
Science reporter, BBC News





'Future fibres' come of age
A new type of carbon fibre, developed at the University of Cambridge, could be woven into super-strong body armour for the military and law enforcement.

The researchers say their material is already several times stronger, tougher and stiffer than fibres currently used to make protective armour.

The lightweight fibre, made up of millions of tiny carbon nanotubes, is starting to reveal exciting properties.

Carbon nanotubes are hollow cylinders of carbon just one atom thick.

The new material was developed by a group at the Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy at Cambridge.

It has emerged from efforts to create the world's strongest man-made fibre.

Our fibre is up there with the existing high performance fibres

Alan Windle, University of Cambridge
"These nanotube fibres possess characteristics which enable them to be woven as a cloth, or incorporated into composite materials to produce super-strong products," said Professor Windle.

For body armour, the strength of fibres in a fabric is a critical parameter. Strain-to-failure - in other words how much the material can extend before it breaks - is another.

The fibre created in Cambridge is very strong, lightweight and good at absorbing energy in the form of fragments travelling at very high velocity.


Carbon nanotube filaments are lightweight but very, very strong
"Our fibre is up there with the existing high performance fibres such as Kevlar", said Professor Windle.

But he added: "We've seen bits that are much better than Kevlar in all respects".

The work at Cambridge has already attracted interest from the UK Ministry of Defence and the US Army.

But the new material could also find applications in the area of hi-tech "smart" clothing, bomb-proof refuse bins, flexible solar panels, and, eventually, as a replacement for copper wire in transmitting electrical power and signals.

The method for making the fibre is simple but ingenious.

'Elastic smoke'

A hydrocarbon feedstock, such as ethanol, is injected into the furnace along with a small amount of iron-based catalyst.

Inside the furnace, this feedstock is broken down into hydrogen and carbon. The carbon is then chemically "re-built" on particles of iron catalyst as long, thin-walled nanotubes.

CARBON NANOTUBES

Made by folding over layers of graphite so they join at each end, forming a cylinder
Measure just a few billionths of a metre across
When pulled along their axes, are 5-10 times stronger than strongest known fibre
Can have single walls or multiple walls
"It makes particles of carbon that are like smoke. But because the nanotubes are entangled, the smoke we make is elastic," explains Professor Windle.

To the eye, this "elastic smoke" looks a bit like an ever-expanding dark "sock".

To begin winding it up, a rod is inserted into the furnace from below to grab one end of the sock and yank it down. This stretches the sock into a filament that can be wound up continuously on a reel.

The researchers are currently seeking funds to investigate whether the method can be upgraded from a laboratory to an industrial process.

Cambridge Enterprise Limited, the commercialisation office of the University of Cambridge, filed an initial patent application in July 2003.

It has now granted a licence to Q-Flo Limited, a university spin-out company, which will exploit the technology.

Nanotubes are made from graphite which is - along with diamond - one of two common forms carbon takes in nature. In graphite, carbon atoms are bonded in hexagon structures to form flat layers that are stacked on top of one another like sheets of paper.

To make nanotubes, scientists take individual graphite layers and fold them over so they join at either edge to form cylinders.




http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/44169000/jpg/_44169195_armour_usarmy_long.jpg

chuterigger
27 October 2007, 19:55
I hope its true, but universities love to hype shit up.

"better than kevlar in ALL respects"...

Has it even been shot at? Gimme a break.

Snake
27 October 2007, 23:08
"better than kevlar in ALL respects"...

Has it even been shot at? Gimme a break.

I guess they are referring to it's mechanical properties.

TPD1280
28 October 2007, 00:24
Carbon nanotubes sounds ineresting. Don't forget, it is not enough to simply stop the bullet, armor also has to disperse the energy of the bullet in such a mmaner to avoid blunt force trauma killing the wearer.


BTW: The guy wearing the Boba Fett get-up looks like a fag.

Why do the designers always go the Star Wars route when planning future armor?

Look at the huge freakin gaps in the coverage.

chuterigger
28 October 2007, 01:10
I hope it works, I just hope something gets moving in this field, how long has kevlar been king?

Its about time our dudes got something light, flexable and rifle rated, yeah physically impossible I know:D

Max Power
28 October 2007, 10:41
I'm not too hot on this. Putting carbon nanotubes into body armor is like putting asbestos in a flight suit. Sure it can be done, but inhalation of carbon nanotubes can cause a whole slew of problems - http://canapeweb.com/health.html for some basic info.

TPD1280
28 October 2007, 12:07
That's a legitimate question that should be answered before widespread employment.

GRIFFIN
30 October 2007, 13:17
I hope it works, I just hope something gets moving in this field, how long has kevlar been king?

Its about time our dudes got something light, flexable and rifle rated, yeah physically impossible I know:D


Kevlar is not King, it is quickly becoming the 8-track of the armoring world (IMHO)

Scotty
6 November 2007, 15:13
Kevlar is not King, it is quickly becoming the 8-track of the armoring world (IMHO)

That's a lot of people's opinions, luckily it's becomming the opinion of the people that make decisions about such things. A little late but better than never.

Scotty