Self-Healing Spacecraft?

Status
Not open for further replies.
Z

zavvy

Guest
<b>Self-Healing Spacecraft?</b><br /><br />LINK<br /><br />Aerospace engineers are developing self-repairing materials that "heal" themselves when damaged. <br /><br />Shuttles, probes, and satellites sheathed in the stuff could safeguard craft from the wear and tear of space, researchers say. <br /><br />Cosmic craft are "constantly being barraged by all sorts of nasties," said Ian Bond, an aerospace engineer at the University of Bristol in England. <br /><br />Hazards include whizzing dust and space junk and extreme temperatures, which can cause structural breaks and cracks. <br /><br />Those threats and others can weaken spacecraft until they suffer catastrophic structural failures, Bond says. <br /><br />So why not build shuttles, satellites, even airplanes, from materials that repair minor damage automatically? <br /><br />Broken Glass <br /><br />To develop a material that mends nicks and scrapes on its own, Bond and his colleagues turned to a counterintuitive solution that uses fragile glass tubes. <br /><br />The thin, hollow fibers are filled with one of two liquids that quickly solidify into epoxy resin when mixed. <br /><br />The engineers incorporated rows of these glass tubes into building panels similar to those used to construct spacecraft. <br /><br />"As long as those fibers break during an impact event," Bond said, "the resin can bleed out into the damage and harden up." <br /><br />"It effectively glues back together the damage," like a scab does on a bleeding cut, he said. <br /><br />Instant Chemistry <br /><br />In recent experiments, Bond's team constructed and then intentionally damaged some panels containing the fibers. <br /><br />The engineers then took the panels apart to assess how efficiently they healed. Researchers determined that the process restored about half of the structural strength that the panel lost upon impact. <br /><br />The team described their wor
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Latest posts