Army engineers develop technique to make adaptive materials
18. 4. 2018 | U.S. Army Research Laboratory | www.arl.army.mil
Engineers at the U.S. Army Research Laboratory and the University of Maryland have developed a technique that causes a composite material to become stiffer and stronger on-demand when exposed to ultraviolet light.
This on-demand control of composite behavior could enable a variety of new capabilities for future Army rotorcraft design, performance and maintenance.
ARL's Dr. Frank Gardea, a research engineer, said the focus of the research was on controlling how molecules interact with each other. He said the aim was to “have them interact in such a way that changes at a small size, or nanoscale, could lead to observed changes at a larger size, or macroscale.”
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Image Credit: U.S. Army Research Laboratory
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