| Scientists at the University of Virginia have announced  the discovery of a non-magnetic amorphous material that is three times stronger  than conventional steel and has superior anti-corrosion properties. A future  variation of the new material, called DARVA-Glass 101, could be used for  making ship hulls, lighter automobiles, tall buildings, corrosion-resistant  coatings, surgical instruments and recreational equipment. The scientists say  commercial use of the material could be available within three to five years. The material, made up of steel alloys that possess a  randomised arrangement of atoms -- thus “amorphous steel” -- was discovered  by modifying an earlier version of amorphous steel known as DARVA-Glass 1  reported by the U.Va. researchers at the Fall 2002 meeting of the Materials  Research Society. In May of this year they reported on DARVA-Glass 101 in the  Journal of Materials Research. “Amorphous steels can potentially revolutionise the steel  industry,” said Joseph Poon, professor of physics at U.Va. and principal  investigator for the team that has discovered the material and is now making  alterations of it for possible future use in mass production.  Poon’s U.Va. co-investigators are Gary Shiflet, professor  of materials science and engineering, and Vijayabarathi Ponnambalam,  materials physicist. Their amorphous steel project at U.Va is sponsored by  the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s Structural Amorphous Metals  Program. According to Poon, researchers have been trying for years  to make amorphous steel in sizes large enough to have practical use. The U.Va  researchers have succeeded in producing large-size amorphous steel samples  that can be further scaled up. They achieve this by adding a small dose of a  rare earth element or yttrium to DARVA-Glass 1. The researchers believe that  the large size rare earth or yttrium atom causes destabilisation of the  competing crystal structure wherein the significant atomic level stress can  lead to the formation of the amorphous structure. These discoveries make the  U.Va. researchers optimistic that the material will be economically available  within the decade.  In a separate work, a group led by C.T. Liu, a materials  scientist at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, has also  reported on large size amorphous steel similar to DARVA-Glass 101 in the June  issue of Physical Review Letters, also by modifying the DARVA-Glass 1 discovered  by the U.Va scientists.  Poon said the amorphous steel is extremely strong, but  brittle in its current state. “We need to toughen the material more,” he  said. “We can always make it better.” According to the U.Va. researchers, amorphous steel can be  machined as well as manipulated like a plastic. “It can be squeezed,  compressed, flattened and shaped.” Poon said. The material is of particular interest to the Navy for  making non-magnetic ship hulls, particularly for submarines, which are  detectable by the magnetic field of their hulls. The amorphous steel that the  U.Va. team is refining is non-magnetic, potentially making a ship invisible  to magnetism detectors and mines that are detonated by magnetic fields. The  new material also may be useful for producing lighter but harder  armour-piercing projectiles. The publicly traded company Liquidmetal  Technologies owns an exclusive license to the amorphous steel invented by the  U.Va. scientists. Other possible uses include recreational equipment such as  tennis racquets, golf clubs and bicycles as well as electronic devices. |