Nitinol Amazing Shape Memory Alloy

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  • Опубликовано: 24 окт 2016
  • In this video I talk about an amazing type of metal called a shape memory alloy. The specific one in this video is called nitinol. It is an alloy of nickel and titanium. It forms an amazing structure that "remembers" its shape even after deformation when you heat it up slightly. If you want it to have a new shape you simply have to heat it until it is red hot and it will form that new shape that it was in when it was red hot. In this video I see if extreme pressure from a hydraulic press can make it form a new shape. I was amazed at the results!
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Комментарии • 92

  • @testep02
    @testep02 5 лет назад +62

    I know this is a very old video, but I just wanted to post that pressure actually causes heat. When you used the press to squeeze the wire, you generated enough heat to cause the wire to reprogram itself. Very cool video. Thanks for uploading this experiment.

  • @ryandurand9769
    @ryandurand9769 4 года назад +21

    The pressure would have created heat during the press so that's why it deformed and stayed deformed pressing it's still a form of energy that ends up discharging into the metal being pressed

  • @quickchicken506
    @quickchicken506 4 года назад +19

    in 1947 the farmers in roswell NM said the same thing about pieces of a crashed ufo

    • @grahamfinlayson18
      @grahamfinlayson18 3 года назад +5

      I came here because of Roswell haha 😆

    • @oltch.
      @oltch. 3 года назад +1

      Yes and this alloy was "discovered" and first used by the US military in 1949.. two years after 1947....... its alien tech

    • @grahamfinlayson18
      @grahamfinlayson18 3 года назад +2

      @@oltch. prove it.

    • @qwestwest7113
      @qwestwest7113 3 года назад

      @@grahamfinlayson18 lmao no that’s just true

    • @Real_Richmond_510
      @Real_Richmond_510 3 года назад

      @@qwestwest7113 exactly..... and pentagon will be releasing the info regarding roswell this month (along with all other info pertaining to ufo/uap info)

  • @_yukixxkim3296
    @_yukixxkim3296 5 лет назад +117

    xD I came from My Hero Academia Shoto and Momo VS Shota lol

  • @Technology62
    @Technology62 7 лет назад +5

    Nice video man! Really interesting

  • @GG-od2tr
    @GG-od2tr 11 месяцев назад

    A most underrated discovery that should be utilized in engines as it gets stronger the more times it goes through phases of memory states. Unlike all other metals deteriorate from the composition of change. I should love if you spoke on time and how little you know it.

  • @naylorXYZ
    @naylorXYZ 3 года назад

    This video is incredible please continue making videos

  • @karenharrison7369
    @karenharrison7369 7 лет назад +1

    That was amazing!!

  • @MammaOVlogs
    @MammaOVlogs 7 лет назад +5

    oh wow this is so cool!

  • @hockeytalkie1867
    @hockeytalkie1867 7 лет назад +3

    Pretty cool how you were able to make it curl up in the water instead of going back to straight

    • @JM-lh8rl
      @JM-lh8rl 7 лет назад +2

      hockeytalkie18 Since the press made the atoms' bonds slip by instead of stretch like bending would do, it assumed that structure as its new shape. When he straightened it, he was stretching the _new_ structure, the one that was already curled up

  • @JT-il3fe
    @JT-il3fe 3 года назад

    Pressure makes heat I would venture to say when you crush metal with tons of force it heats up. Great video

  • @KuroiSenko23
    @KuroiSenko23 4 года назад +1

    That's freaking awesome

  • @KarstenJohansson
    @KarstenJohansson 3 года назад +1

    I have a number of NiTi spools, as well as a sort of "hydraulic" lift made with NiTi (looks like hydrolic or shock absorbers, but it's a NiTi coil instead of oil inside).They are very cool to experiment with. I suspect the reason crushing works, and I was just as surprised btw, is because the crushing would create its own heat, and probably just enough to barely set it for that coiled shape.
    I think that is worth its own experiment.

  • @heidix1513
    @heidix1513 3 года назад

    Love it! 😆

  • @maxn518
    @maxn518 7 лет назад +2

    If you tied it in a know would it untie itself?

  • @iwh7
    @iwh7 7 лет назад +6

    Hi there, interesting video. Thanks a lot.
    But are you shure its from the pressure and not from temperature building up while it got squeezed in the press?
    As much as i know you define the shape it memorizes by heating it up to a certain temperature und forming it.
    Thanks for an answer.

    • @alstenmart
      @alstenmart 6 лет назад +1

      You are right, it gets form under temperature and if he would apply more heat before putting into water it would straightening more.

  • @imnotcreativeenough8453
    @imnotcreativeenough8453 3 года назад +5

    Can you bend it under hot water?

  • @caelb9500
    @caelb9500 3 года назад

    Cool!

  • @user-jq1vb1qx6z
    @user-jq1vb1qx6z 3 года назад +7

    Lmfao everyone here from My Hero Academia 😂

  • @azb3043
    @azb3043 2 года назад

    Good ol’ alien tech, check out memory metal too 👌

  • @ufowatch
    @ufowatch 3 года назад +1

    pressure equals friction and friction equals heat. so when it was crushed it did heat up.

  • @ufowatch
    @ufowatch 3 года назад

    i have been thinking about it alot now and i truly believe this my hold a much bigger secret no one sees yet! this seems to contract and expand super fast with a small amount of heat right? so finally we can make a true perpetual motion device! like a sterling engine only much more efficient. this is it!

    • @thejanssen6030
      @thejanssen6030 3 года назад

      Does this release more energy returning to its memorized shape than it takes to move it out of its memorized shape? Doesn't seem like it. Springs contract and expand super fast with zero heat which would seem to make this less efficient than a spring as a source of mechanical energy.

    • @ufowatch
      @ufowatch 3 года назад

      @@thejanssen6030 One square inch of Nitinol material generates a shape returning force of + 30,000 PSI. does it take that to bend it when it is cold no it moves easy. i have experimented it has a ton of usable force but when cold it bends like butter. so yes it does in my opinion release more than it takes in if done correctly.

    • @thejanssen6030
      @thejanssen6030 3 года назад +3

      @@ufowatch then in your opinion it is breaking the laws of physics and creating energy, and the RUclips comments section is exactly the right place for that type of theory

    • @logic2818
      @logic2818 Год назад

      This technology was actually found from a reverse engineering program that used recovered materials from an Alien craft (actually an Alien drone) that crashed in Roswell NM in 1947. The recovered materials from that crash had metals that were free forming and could be crumpled and returned to their original state instantaneously. My grandfather helped develop the technology in Maryland at the Naval Ordinance Laboratory in White Oak in the mid 50s until it's release in 1959. Much later he revealed to my mother that the catalyst for the idea of memory alloy had come from a reverse engineering program in Bethesda that had recovered materials from the Roswell crash.

  • @cavitive2325
    @cavitive2325 5 лет назад +2

    did you say nitol at 3:46 ?

  • @angeloriolo9918
    @angeloriolo9918 3 года назад +1

    the pressure could cause heat, if you hammer a penny it gets really hot

  • @phenix2540
    @phenix2540 3 года назад +6

    Him: I boiled the water.
    Him:puts his finger in.
    Me: mesmerised ovo

  • @sreebuszeebus1343
    @sreebuszeebus1343 6 лет назад +1

    Where did u get this stuff from

    • @Not_Hawk
      @Not_Hawk 5 лет назад

      EBay or something

  • @wiccanring777
    @wiccanring777 4 года назад +2

    lol "weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeuhhhhhh" goes the hydrolic press

  • @24_hanif5
    @24_hanif5 3 года назад +4

    nitinol alloy has better memory than me memorising my history notes

    • @2NDFLB
      @2NDFLB 7 месяцев назад

      ▪️
      history notes ?

  • @oshanewilson5785
    @oshanewilson5785 4 года назад +1

    how can we even be sure that was hot water though

  • @CaseyEm
    @CaseyEm 2 года назад

    Imagine a sheet of this stuff springing back

  • @tinawolf5560
    @tinawolf5560 Год назад

    Pressure also creates heat

  • @johnb9187
    @johnb9187 6 месяцев назад

    material "weather balloons" were made of in late 1940s. :)

  • @TheOldProgramming
    @TheOldProgramming 4 года назад +2

    You killed the wire

  • @dreamyycludyy8228
    @dreamyycludyy8228 3 года назад +1

    boi- why can i like and dislike the video at the same time

  • @woahtherebuddy5173
    @woahtherebuddy5173 3 года назад

    They use this for braces

  • @georgewoolley2225
    @georgewoolley2225 3 года назад +2

    hello class who are watching this right now! #darwinforlife

  • @Lets_play_channel
    @Lets_play_channel 2 года назад

    I have some nitinol

  • @pspoelstra2162
    @pspoelstra2162 6 лет назад +1

    Transformation temperature is 60 Celsius

  • @silentguy3276
    @silentguy3276 2 года назад

    This is indeed an old video and I search this type of metal because of file kindaichi.

  • @drcubeface
    @drcubeface 3 года назад

    this gave me an idea
    cops could make a device tat senses body heat and wrap around t target

  • @teddybear6376
    @teddybear6376 3 года назад +2

    POV : you came from mr young class or aaess

  • @SonicFanChris4
    @SonicFanChris4 3 года назад +1

    Oh so Metal Gear Solid didn't make this up

    • @2NDFLB
      @2NDFLB 7 месяцев назад

      ▪️
      Metal Gear Solid ?

    • @SonicFanChris4
      @SonicFanChris4 7 месяцев назад

      @@2NDFLB Yes, in Metal Gear Solid there was a key card that used a "shape memory alloy." The key card in that game was able to store different data depending on its temperature

    • @2NDFLB
      @2NDFLB 7 месяцев назад

      @@SonicFanChris4 ▪️
      Key card ?

  • @enzocarvalho7229
    @enzocarvalho7229 3 года назад +2

    whos here in science class ?

  • @OtsileM
    @OtsileM Год назад

    Yaoyorozu didn't make this up

  • @robaxl3088
    @robaxl3088 2 года назад

    Make cars out of this...no more bump repairs

  • @ailefy9898
    @ailefy9898 2 года назад

    slinky made of nitinol.

  • @logic2818
    @logic2818 Год назад

    This technology was actually found from a reverse engineering program that used recovered materials from an Alien craft (actually an Alien drone) that crashed in Roswell NM in 1947. The recovered materials from that crash had metals that were free forming and could be crumpled and returned to their original state instantaneously. My grandfather helped develop the technology in Maryland at the Naval Ordinance Laboratory in White Oak in the mid 50s until it's release in 1959. Much later he revealed to my mother that the catalyst for the idea of memory alloy had come from a reverse engineering program in Bethesda that had recovered materials from the Roswell crash.

  • @farrukTMPR
    @farrukTMPR 7 лет назад +1

    xD

  • @2NDFLB
    @2NDFLB 7 месяцев назад

    ▪️
    Shape memory alloy?