
The world uses tens of millions of tons of lubricant every year, from the smallest part of a micro-precision instrument to the expansion rollers on the largest bridges. Most are oil based, though others use powders, and even metals, and it’s been that way for decades. That could be changing as the Fraunhofer Institute for Mechanics of Materials, Nematel GmbH, and Dr. Tillwich GmbH have developed a new class of lubricants that are based on liquid crystals instead of oil. According to Fraunhofer, this is the first fundamentally new lubricant developed in twenty years... Continue Reading First fundamentally new lubricant in decades created from liquid crystals
Section: Science
Tags: Fraunhofer, Liquid crystal, Research
Related Articles:
Liquid crystal lubricants promise close-to-zero frictional losses
Self-healing paint is just the beginning
Forensic tech would link sex offenders to condoms
"Living liquid crystal" could be used to detect diseases earlier
Mini medical pump design provides accurate dosage
Electronic displays could benefit from new class of liquid crystals
No comments:
Post a Comment
Rules for submitting comments:
1. No profanity. I maintain the pretense that this is a family-friendly site.
2. Stay on topic. A bit of straying and off-hand commenting is okay, but hijacking the discussion is right out.
3. No ad hominem attacks. Attack the subject, not the other person on the thread and keep the discussion civil.
4. No spamming or commercial endorsements. These get deleted immediately.
Tip: Beware of putting hyperlinks in your comments–especially at the end. For some reason, Blogger interprets these as spam.
Note: Due to the recent spate of anonymous spamming, registration for comments is now required.