New Boeing Video Introduces Microlattice, The Lightest Metal Ever

By: | October 20th, 2015

Boeing has released a video highlighting microlattice, which they say is the lightest metal ever made.

From the YouTube description:

At 99.99% air, it’s light enough to balance on top of a dandelion, while its structure makes it strong. Strength and record breaking lightness make it a potential metal for future planes and vehicles.

Comprised of interconnecting hollow tubes that are each 1000 times thinner than a human hair, microlattice is classified as a “3D open-cellular polymer structure.”

Incredibly, it is 100 times lighter than styrofoam, making microlattice one of the strongest materials known to science in general.

The most obvious application for the ultra light metal is in aerospace where the use of it within a plane would reduce the weight of the aircraft and save an astronomical amount of money on fuel.

Sophia Yang, research scientist at HRL Laboratories says the metal is comparable to bone, whereby the outside of the bone is rigid while the inside is mostly hollow.

This results in an open-cellular structure that ultimately lends to microlattice being extremely strong and lightweight at the same time.

Via: Tech Steel

Marshall Smith

Technology, engineering, and design enthusiast.

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