Aerogel - coming to a space suit near you...
this could do a LOT to revolutionize everything from weaponry to household appliances. Question is.. is it biodegradable?
Last thing we need is to create another \"plastic\" crisis by utilizing a material which takes millions of years to biodegrade or expells toxic pollutants when melted down...
If this is a recyclable material, it very well COULD revolutionize the world.
Last thing we need is to create another \"plastic\" crisis by utilizing a material which takes millions of years to biodegrade or expells toxic pollutants when melted down...
If this is a recyclable material, it very well COULD revolutionize the world.
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It sounds like you're familar with the stuff Lothar - do you know it from your work or something - and if so, in what capacity?Lothar wrote:I have much lurb for aerogel. It's amazing stuff.
i think i wrote some ZZZonline articles about Aerogel back in the day. It's been out a looooooongcat time.
seeing it in action is pretty spectacular.
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=aerogel
I wouldn't worry Blue, it's easily crushed, it's like 99.999999% nothing. IIRC the latest aerogels are nothing but Carbon and um.... methanol or air or vacuum or something (i forget).
it pings & rings just like glass when you tap it.
seeing it in action is pretty spectacular.
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=aerogel
I wouldn't worry Blue, it's easily crushed, it's like 99.999999% nothing. IIRC the latest aerogels are nothing but Carbon and um.... methanol or air or vacuum or something (i forget).
it pings & rings just like glass when you tap it.
- TIGERassault
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Dude! I'd pay $500 for that! Even $5,000! I mean, you could pretty much fly using it!roid wrote:something i've always wondered: If the space between the fibers of Aerogel is vacuum - would it be possible to make an Aerogel solid that is lighter than air? that would be amazing, i'd pay $50 for that
Wait, is it a vacuum?
Oh, and according to Wikipedia:
"The world's lowest-density solid is a silica nanofoam at 1 mg/cm3, which is the evacuated version of the record-aerogel of 1.9 mg/cm3. The density of air is 1.2 mg/cm3."
Also, it's worth remembering that Aerogel is very absorbent and don't last very long before disintegrating. Which makes it pretty incompatible as building material.
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Then why doesn't it float up like an He2 balloon? At least, not in the video posted above.roid wrote:well thar you go!
evacuated silica nanofoam, 20% lighter than air itself