Shrinking Crystals Makes Safer Metal Alloys, MIT Finds
AEN News
Reno, NV - MIT researchers have devised a new method for shrinking the
size of crystals to make safer metal alloys. The new materials could
replace metal coatings such as chromium, which is dangerous for factory
workers to produce.
The method, developed by Associate Professor Christopher Schuh and
graduate student Andrew Detor, both of the Department of Materials
Science and Engineering, involves making the crystals within an
alloy (a combination of two or more metals) smaller and thus harder.
For the chromium replacement, the two made crystals of nickel and
tungsten small enough that the resulting alloy is as hard as
chromium. The trick is a new twist on electroplating that
involves manipulating -- on the nanoscale, or billionths of
a meter -- how the nickel and tungsten atoms are laid down
as they are plated onto another metal.
While so-called hard chromium is used to coat industrial parts
and decorative items such as automobile bumpers, the coating
process uses a form of chromium called hexavalent chromium
that has been linked to cancer and other adverse health
effects if workers inhale it. A steel ring, for example, is
coated using a bath of hexavalent chromium that gives off harmful fumes.
While exhaust hoods are used to take away much of the fumes, the
federal government currently is considering tougher safety standards
for workers exposed to the baths. That has led industrial companies
to look for metals that will not give off the harmful fumes.
Schuh says the new alloy is one such safer alternative.
"The ability to control the structure of a metal to nearly the
atomic scale is new and enables us to make the alloy very hard,"
Schuh said.
He compared the method to making a wall out of stones and mortar.
Using large stones doesn't require much mortar, but smaller
stones require more mortar, which makes for a stronger stone wall.
In the new chromium replacement, each microscopic piece of nickel
is surrounded by even tinier bits of tungsten. The researchers
control how the tungsten fills in the spaces between the pieces
of nickel, thus creating a tighter and stronger crystal structure
than metals and alloys with larger crystals.
In addition to producing safer alternative metal coatings, the
method also allows for manipulating the structure of metals to
improve their resistance to cracking, corrosion and other wear
and tear, Schuh said. Schuh already has tested steel coated
with chromium and his new alloy, and the alloy has held up
better against some types of corrosion.
Schuh said that while replacing chromium as a metal coating is
likely to be the initial application of this method, other
nanostructure alloys could be used to replace other metal coatings in the future.
Hexavalent chromium, the material Schuh hopes to replace, is used
in just about every major heavy industry worldwide. It has been
under scrutiny since the early 1970s and was the subject of the
movie, "Erin Brockovich." New environmental standards on
hexavalent chromium expected soon from the Occupational Safety
and Health Administration (OSHA) could be 50 times more stringent
than current standards.
More than 25,000 U.S. workers are exposed to hexavalent chromium
each year in the chrome-plating process alone, according to OSHA
figures. And that's only a fraction of the total number exposed
to the carcinogen.
"Other countries also are introducing significant new controls, so
this is a problem that is not going to go away," said Schuh. He
said he expects industries using hexavalent chromium to undergo
major structural changes to meet the new standards, including
seeking alternative materials for plating.
Schuh has filed for two patents on the technology. An article on
the new method is to appear this summer in the Materials Research
Society Proceedings.
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