Defense and military

Defense and military includes sensors and materials used for military gear and military equipment

Nanostructured copper alloy rivals superalloys in strength and stability

Researchers from Lehigh University, the U.S. Army Research Laboratory, Arizona State University, and Louisiana State University have developed a nanostructured copper alloy with exceptional thermal stability and mechanical strength, making it one of the most resilient copper-based materials ever created. The breakthrough comes from the formation of copper-lithium precipitates, stabilized by a tantalum-rich atomic bilayer complexion.

Scientists develop coating for enhanced thermal imaging through hot windows

Scientists at Rice University have made it possible to capture clear images of objects through hot windows. The core of this breakthrough lies in the design of nanoscale resonators, which work like miniature tuning forks trapping and enhancing electromagnetic waves within specific frequencies. The resonators are made from silicon and organized in a precise array that allows fine control over how the window emits and transmits thermal radiation. One immediate application is in chemical processing, in which chemical reactions inside high-temperature chambers need to be monitored.

“Nanostitches” enable lighter and tougher composite materials

Researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Universitat de Girona in Spain, and Universidade do Porto in Portugal have shown that they can prevent cracks from spreading between layers in a composite material by depositing chemically grown forests of carbon nanotubes between the composite layers. The tiny, densely packed fibers grip and hold the layers together, like ultrastrong Velcro, preventing the layers from peeling or shearing apart.

NRL Discovers Two-Dimensional Waveguides

Researchers from the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory and Kansas State University have discovered slab waveguides based on the two-dimensional material hexagonal boron nitride. "We knew using hexagonal boron nitride would lead to outstanding optical properties in our samples; none of us expected that it would also act as a waveguide," said Samuel Lagasse, one of the scientists involved in the study. The slabs of hexagonal boron nitride were carefully tuned in thickness so that the emitted light would be trapped within the hexagonal boron nitride and waveguided.

Benchtop test quickly identifies extremely impact-resistant materials

Engineers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (including the MIT Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies) and the Army Research Laboratory have developed a new way to quickly test an array of metamaterial architectures and their resilience to supersonic impacts. Metamaterials are functional materials that contain unique microscale and nanoscale patterns or structures. The engineers suspended tiny, printed metamaterial lattices between microscopic support structures and then fired even tinier particles at the materials, at supersonic speeds.