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Ideal Material

2 min · I går
episode Ideal Material cover

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If you were to design the perfect industrial material, what would it be like? You’d want it to be strong and lightweight. Easy to form into different shapes. You’d like it to be resistant to corrosion. And to heat. Ideally, you could easily combine it with other materials for more uses. And re-uses. It would be best if all these qualities came in something cheap and abundant. And in fact, they do. This ideal material … is aluminum. It’s the third-most abundant element in Earth’s crust, behind oxygen and silicon. It’s a small, highly charged atom, so it bonds well to others to form valuable alloys. Adding even a small fraction of copper makes aluminum much harder, for use in things like jet engines. A little magnesium makes it much more malleable, for things like packaging. A little boron raises aluminum’s electrical conductivity almost to that of copper, to make a cheaper, lighter wire ideal for transmission lines. It’s made from bauxite ore, in a process that requires a great deal of electricity. But it takes only 5% of that energy to recycle it. As a result, of the nearly 1 billion tons of aluminum ever produced, three-quarters of it is still in use—recycled in a closed loop so that its many benefits can be enjoyed again and again. That truly is an ideal material.

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episode Ideal Material cover

Ideal Material

If you were to design the perfect industrial material, what would it be like? You’d want it to be strong and lightweight. Easy to form into different shapes. You’d like it to be resistant to corrosion. And to heat. Ideally, you could easily combine it with other materials for more uses. And re-uses. It would be best if all these qualities came in something cheap and abundant. And in fact, they do. This ideal material … is aluminum. It’s the third-most abundant element in Earth’s crust, behind oxygen and silicon. It’s a small, highly charged atom, so it bonds well to others to form valuable alloys. Adding even a small fraction of copper makes aluminum much harder, for use in things like jet engines. A little magnesium makes it much more malleable, for things like packaging. A little boron raises aluminum’s electrical conductivity almost to that of copper, to make a cheaper, lighter wire ideal for transmission lines. It’s made from bauxite ore, in a process that requires a great deal of electricity. But it takes only 5% of that energy to recycle it. As a result, of the nearly 1 billion tons of aluminum ever produced, three-quarters of it is still in use—recycled in a closed loop so that its many benefits can be enjoyed again and again. That truly is an ideal material.

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