MMaterialNews 2009/09/28

Smart Memory Foam Made Smarter

Metallic foam less expensive to make, leading to more applications
Researchers from Northwestern University and Boise State University have figured out how to produce a less expensive shape-shifting “memory” foam, which could lead to more widespread applications of the material, such as in surgical positioning tools and valve mechanisms.

David Dunand, the James N. and Margie M. Krebs Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at Northwestern, has been collaborating with Peter Müllner, professor of materials science and engineering at Boise State, on a project focused on a nickel-manganese-gallium alloy that changes shape when exposed to a magnetic field.

The alloy retains its new shape when the field is turned off but returns to its original shape if the field is rotated 90 degrees, demonstrating “magnetic shape-memory.” The alloy can be activated millions of times, and it deforms reliably and reproducibly as a result. This property could be used to advantage in fast-operating actuators (mechanical devices for moving or controlling a mechanism or system) in inkjet printers, car engines and surgical tools.

To date, the magnetic shape-memory effect has occurred only in nickel-manganese-gallium single crystals, which are much more difficult and expensive to create than the more common polycrystals.

Now, Dunand, Müllner and their colleagues have created easily processable polycrystalline foams with shape-changing properties resembling those of the much more expensive single crystals. They did this by introducing small pores into the “nodes” of their original metallic foam, which, much like a sponge, consisted of struts connected by relatively large nodes. Adding a second level of porosity allowed for deformation and retention in the polycrystalline foam of some of the shape-memory properties.

The results are published online by the journal Nature Materials.

“One key aspect of this new ‘smart’ foam is that, together with a simple coil to produce a magnetic field, it creates a linear actuator of extreme simplicity -- and thus high reliability and miniaturization potential -- replacing a much more complex electro-mechanical system with many moving parts,” Dunand said.

Potential applications range from replacing materials currently being used in sonar devices, precision actuators and magneto-mechanical sensors to enabling new devices in biomedicine and microrobotics.

“This was such a huge improvement that the foam was tested over and over again to make sure that no experimental mistakes were made,” Müllner said. “Our new results may pave the way for magnetic shape-memory alloys for use in research labs and commercial applications.”

Source: Northwestern University – 24.09.2009.

Northwestern and Boise State have jointly filed a patent application:

The title of the Nature Materials paper is “Giant Magnetic-field-induced Strains in Polycrystalline Ni–Mn–Ga Foams.” In addition to Dunand and Müllner, other authors of the paper are Xuexi Zhang, a visiting professor in Dunand’s lab from China’s Harbin Institute of Technology, and Markus Chmielus and Cassie Witherspoon, graduate students at Boise State.

Investigated and edited by:

Dr.-Ing. Christoph Konetschny, Materials Consultant, Owner of Materialsgate
The investigation and editing of this document was performed with best care and attention. For the accuracy, validity, availability and applicability of the given information, we take no liability. Please discuss the suitability concerning your specific application with the experts of the named company or organization.

You want additional material or technology investigations concerning this subject?

Materialsgate is leading in material consulting and material investigation.
Feel free to use our established consulting services

MMore on this topic

NIST researchers have used inexpensive, readily available materials to create an electronic memory chip that can be bent or twisted—some 4,000 times in tests—and still keep functioning.
Electronic memory chips may soon gain the ability to bend and twist as a result of work by engineers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). As reported in the July 2009 issue of IEEE Electron Device Letters,* the engineers have found a way to build a flexible memory component out of inexpensive, readily available materials. Though not yet ready for the marketplace, the new device is promising not only because of its potential applications in medicine and other fields, but... more
Applications for circulatory, nervous and skeletal systems
Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology are developing unique polymers, which change shape upon heating, to open blocked arteries, probe neurons in the brain and engineer a tougher spine. These so-called shape-memory polymers can be temporarily stretched or compressed into forms several times larger or smaller than their final shape. Then heat, light or the local chemical environment triggers a transformation into their permanent shape. “My focus has been to optimize these polymers... more
+ + + New magnetic shape-memory foam made from nickel-manganese-gallium alloy + + + Poking holes in magnetic alloy improves its shape-morphing capability + + +
In the world of commercial materials, lighter and cheaper is usually better, especially when those attributes are coupled with superior strength and special properties, such as a material's ability to remember its original shape after it's been deformed by a physical or magnetic force. A new class of materials known as "magnetic shape-memory foams" has been developed by two research teams headed by Peter Müllner at Boise State University and David Dunand at Northwestern University... more
Crumpled kitchen foil that lays flat for reuse. Bent bumpers that straighten overnight. Dents in car doors that disappear when heated with a hairdryer.
These and other physical feats may become possible with a technique to make memory metals discovered by researchers at the University of Illinois. Normally, when a piece of metal – such as a paperclip – is bent, the change in shape becomes permanent. But, when heat is added to bent metal films having the right microstructure, the researchers found, the films return to their original shapes. The higher the temperature, the sooner the metal films revert. “It’s as though the metal has a... more
RSS
facebook
xing
twitter
linkedin

MaterialCards Weekly

Your personal and free material reminder - weekly by email

Service:
Material Charac­teri­za­tion
and Testing

You Need Advanced and Efficient Methods of Material Charac­teri­za­tion and Testing to Optimize Your Products?
Characterization of Barrier Properties
Ceramography
Characterization of Catalysts
Thermography
Characterization of Coatings
Failure Analysis of Products
Characterization of Nano-Coatings
Automotive Testing
Element Mapping
Characterization of Diffusion Profiles
Microstructure Analysis
Characterization of Materials for Medical Applications
Characterization of Composites
Failure Analysis of Composites
Characterization of Electrical and Thermal Properties
Corrosion Tests
Characterization of Joining Technologies
Metallography
Fracture Mechanics
Testing of Plastics and Polymers
Characterization of Barrier Properties
Ceramography
Characterization of Catalysts
Thermography
Characterization of Coatings
Failure Analysis of Products
Characterization of Nano-Coatings
Automotive Testing
Element Mapping
Characterization of Diffusion Profiles
Microstructure Analysis
Characterization of Materials for Medical Applications
Characterization of Composites
Failure Analysis of Composites
Characterization of Electrical and Thermal Properties
Corrosion Tests
Characterization of Joining Technologies
Metallography
Fracture Mechanics
Testing of Plastics and Polymers
Contact us – We will forward your request to one of our qualified co­operation partners in this field. All of them operate certified la­bo­ra­to­ries with modern and the most diverse equipment.

Recommended Books

William D. Callister
John Wiley and Sons (WIE)
Günter Schulze
Springer, Berlin
H. Schumann et al.
Wiley-VCH
Erhard Hornbogen et al
Springer
William F. Riley
John Wiley & Sons
Nader Engheta
Wiley & Sons
Werner Schatt et al
Springer, Berlin
M. F. Ashby et al.
Spektrum Akademischer Verlag
Bradley D. Fahlman
Springer Netherlands
Sylvia Leydecker
Birkhäuser