Employing machine learning to create wear and corrosion resistant metallic glass
If you combine two or three metals together, you will get an alloy that usually looks and acts like a metal, with its atoms arranged in rigid geometric patterns. But once in a while, under just the right conditions, you get something entirely new: a futuristic alloy called metallic glass. The amorphous material's atoms are arranged every which way, much like the atoms of the glass in a window. Its glassy nature makes it stronger and lighter than today's best steel, and it stands up better to corrosion and wear. Although metallic glass shows a lot of promise as a protective coating and alternative to steel, only a few thousand of the millions of possible combinations of ingredients have been evaluated over the past 50 years, and only a handful developed to the point that they may become useful.
May-4-2018, 09:02:00 GMT
- Country:
- North America > United States (0.31)
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.74)
- Industry:
- Construction & Engineering (0.40)
- Energy (0.33)
- Government > Regional Government
- Materials > Metals & Mining (0.40)
- Technology: