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#1
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What is the maximum theoretical size possible for a lighter-than-air
balloon, using ideal materials, before it loses its integrity? Here's an article from a month ago, about sheets being made from the famous nanotubes: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releas...-utd081505.php http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanotube quote from Wikipedia: "Ray Baughman's group from the NanoTech Institute at University of Texas at Dallas produced the current toughest material known in mid-2003 by spinning fibers of single wall carbon nanotubes with polyvinyl alcohol. Beating the previous contender, spider silk, by a factor of four, the fibers require 600J/g to break. In comparison, the bullet-resistant fiber Kevlar is 27-33J/g. In mid-2005 Baughman and co-workers from Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization developed a method for producing transparent carbon nanotube sheets 1/1000th the thickness of a human hair capable of supporting 50,000 times their own mass. In August 2005, Ray Baughman's team managed to develop a fast method to manufacture up to seven meters per minute of nanotube tape. Once washed with ethanol, the ribbon is only 50 nanometers thick; a square kilometer of the material would only weigh 30 kilograms." ------- So if the limiting factor is tensile strength, and nanotube fibres are the record-holder at 600J/g tensile strength (20x stronger than kevlar??) while also having a mass of 30 kg per sq km, then how big can one make a balloon held together by the nanotubes? And what kind of displacement lift force would it exert? |
#2
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Hi,
I am just trying to assist here. "toughest material ....600J/g" ...... "at 600J/g tensile strength" Are incompatible. Toughness and tensile strength are not the same thing AT ALL. IIRC toughness is the Energy required to break a test specimen. The energy is delivered in a short time (e.g. with a hammer blow). The units will be I guess Energy per unit Area. Tensile strength is the force per unit area required to (slowly) break the material in tension. So not only are the two not directly related, it looks to me as if the wikipedia article is misleading. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanotube Says: "was tested to have a tensile strength of 63GPa" I say: - This is a unit of Pressure (force per unit area ) which I agree with. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanotube Says: "In comparison, the bullet-resistant fiber Kevlar is 27-33J/g" Maybe there is some sense to the idea of toughness having the units 27-33J/g however I can't see it at present. |
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