Chemistry 2 - Smart Materials
What is a smart material?
Should smart materials be called 'intelligent'
How can smart materials be used?
Pupils should:
(a) know that the term smart material has been given to a range of modern materials whose properties change with a change in the surroundings, such as changes in temperature, light, pH, etc, for example:
- thermochromic paint, which changes colour when heated
- photochromic paint, which changes colour on exposure to light
- shape memory alloy, such as NiTi or nitinol, an alloy of nickel and titanium, which has the ability to regain it's original shape when heated; uses include coffee-pot thermostat, superelastic spectacle frames, stents for veins, etc.
- shape memory polymer, which has the ability to regain its original shape when heated; potential uses include biodegradable surgical sutures that will automatically tighten to the correct tension and self repairing car bodies that will recover shape on gentle heating after a dent.
- polymer gels, such as hydrogels, have a cross linked polymer structure inflated with a solvent, such as water; the gel has the ability to swell or shrink (up to 1000 times in volume) due to small changes in, e.g. temperature or pH;
intended uses include artificial muscles, robot actuators, absorbers of toxic chemicals, etc.
(b) use given data to evaluate the social, economic and environmental impact of the use of smart materials.
Software requirements
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