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#1167 | |
Random Account
Aug 2009
Not U. + S.A.
252910 Posts |
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BTW, the large burnt-orange section of the SLS, is that a single stage, or two? |
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#1168 | |
"TF79LL86GIMPS96gpu17"
Mar 2017
US midwest
11100110001102 Posts |
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By analogy to 1D polyaramids, melting point would be >500C. Chemical 2D bonding may increase that.
This stuff might make a great ablative heat shield. Or load bearing thermal insulation system for moderate heat to cryogenic, especially if it self orients when foamed and can be coaxed into bonding fractally. It took some digging, but I finally found a URL with quantitative values for properties, not ratios to other materials. (Paywalled Nature article, abstract freely available gives ~13. GPa 2d elastic modulus, ~490. MPa yield strength. I estimate density ~1.3 g/cc from steel/6.) Comparing strength to steel is very problematic, as steels have such a wide range of composition and properties. Contrast for example cheap structural steel with tool steels (~500MPa vs. 1.8GPa ultimate tensile strength, ~250MPa vs ~1.5GPa yield strength). Densities vary a bit too. Elastic modulus of steel varies a bit, but typically ~200. GPa, ~16. times higher than for the new 2D plastic. The 2DPA1 plastic or future formulations to follow might be interesting as a component in a composite face sheet in honeycomb constructions: thin outer coat of plastic as corrosion inhibitor, strain hardened metal foil, plastic spacer, second metal foil, thin coat as corrosion inhibitor composing one face sheet of a honeycomb layup, to get lots of face sheet buckling resistance and strength at low weight. Honeycomb materials fail in a variety of ways: face sheet buckling sheet/core bond delamination core crush corrosion compressive or tensile yield (more?) In high performance high weight penalty applications such as aerospace, one could even consider a compound honeycomb, where the plastic spacer in the sandwich described above is a low core height honeycomb geometry. This may be like the discovery of the first high temperature superconductor. Decades later we still don't have practical room temperature superconductors, but the floodgates opened on HTSC research and considerable advance has been achieved. Now imagine long needle shaped, thick-walled relative to bore diameter, pressure vessels made of steel or other high strength material, corrosion proofed with something impervious to 270+ MPa of CH4 and H2S (superconductive to +14C), with copper terminations/connections, in an ice bath, or in cold deep ocean or deep great-lakes water, for long distance power transmission at low loss. Quote:
Last fiddled with by kriesel on 2022-02-25 at 16:33 |
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#1169 |
Bamboozled!
"๐บ๐๐ท๐ท๐ญ"
May 2003
Down not across
1165810 Posts |
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Tungsten is another. ure tungsten is as malleable as copper. Add <= 1% oxygen, as is found in almost all commercial samples, and at room temperature it is about as brittle as glass. Heat commercial W red-hot and it is also as brittle. A little below that temperature and it is again as easily worked as is Cu. One of my (almost) completely useless skills is to know how to heat tungsten wire so that it can be bent into furnace-heating elements. People either have the skill or they do not. The lab glass-blowing chappie said it was almost impossible to teach it.
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#1170 |
6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
101ร103 Posts
10,891 Posts |
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With the Shuttle that was just a pair of tanks. With SLS it is complicated. Block 1 will have a the tanks and an adapter to the stage above that. The adapter cone is orange, but the second stage is white. The later Block 1B will have a larger diameter second stage that is orange (the colour of the insulation). Block 2 is the same as Block 1B, except the boosters are upgraded.
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#1171 |
Feb 2017
Nowhere
184E16 Posts |
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Boeing's Starliner capsule successfully launched at 6:54 EDT (2254 GMT) May 19.
Starliner is scheduled to dock with the ISS around 7 p.m. EDT (2300 GMT) on Friday, May 20. |
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#1172 | |
If I May
"Chris Halsall"
Sep 2002
Barbados
101011010000102 Posts |
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Boeing *needs* this to work. Let us hope they figured out their software issues. Separately... Musk is working a bit deeper... |
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#1173 |
6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
101ร103 Posts
10,891 Posts |
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Don't celebrate too quickly.
https://twitter.com/StephenClark1/st...57462240137229 |
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#1174 | |
Aug 2002
North San Diego County
22×3×67 Posts |
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Frustrating that Boeing has fallen so far. |
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#1175 |
If I May
"Chris Halsall"
Sep 2002
Barbados
101011010000102 Posts |
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Boeing is used to "cost plus" contracts for its rocketry work.
Politicians love these because the contractor makes sure to spread the work across all the various states so everyone can point to the employment opportunities provided. SLS is a perfect example of this. In the false economy of these types of projects, wasted money is actually a good thing. Actually getting the job done is secondary. |
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#1176 | |
6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
101ร103 Posts
2A8B16 Posts |
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#1177 | |
Feb 2017
Nowhere
622210 Posts |
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Even so, I haven't heard of any Boeing execs being reduced to picking crusts out of the gutter... Last fiddled with by Dr Sardonicus on 2022-05-21 at 16:23 Reason: clarification |
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