Saturday, November 28, 2015

TECH SPECIAL.... Scientists make real gold as light as air


 Scientists make real gold
 as light as air


The gold foam consists of 98 parts air and only two parts of 
solid material.
 Of this solid material, more than four-fifths is gold and less than
one-fifth is milk protein fibrils, corresponding to around 
20 carat of gold

Researchers at ETH Zurich have created anew type of foam made of real
 gold.
 It is the lightest form ever produced of the precious metal: a thousand times
lighter than its conventional form and yet it is nearly impossible to tell the
difference with the naked eye.
Scientists, led by Raffaele Mezzenga, Professor of Food and Soft Materials,
 produced the three-dimensional mesh of gold that consists mostly of pores.
It is the lightest gold nugget ever created.
“The so-called aerogel is a thousand times lighter than conventional gold
alloys. It is lighter than water and almost as light as air,“ said Mezzenga.
The new gold form can hardly be differentiated from conventional gold
 with the naked eye ­ the aerogel even has a metallic shine. But in contrast
to its conventional form, it is soft and malleable by hand.
It consists of 98 parts air and only two parts of solid material.
Of this solid material, more than four-fifths is gold and less than
one-fifth is milk protein fibrils. This corresponds to around 20 carat gold.
The scientists created the porous material by first heating milk proteins to
 produce nanometre-fine protein fibres, or amyloid fibrils, which they then
 placed in a solution of gold salt.
The protein fibres interlaced themselves into a basic structure along which
 the gold simultaneously crystallised into small particles. This resulted in a
 gel-like gold fibre network.
As air drying could damage the fine gold structure, the scientists opted for
a gentle and la borious process using carbon dioxide. The method's biggest
 advantage is that it makes it easy to obtain a homogeneous gold aerogel,
 perfectly mimicking gold alloys.
The manufacturing technique also offers scientists numerous possibilities
to deliberately influence the properties of gold.
The new material could be used in many of the applications where gold is
currently being used, said Mezzenga. Applications in watches and jewellery
are only one possibility. Another application demonstrated by the scientists
is chemical catalysis: since the highly porous material has a huge surface,
chemical reactions that depend on the presence of gold can be run in a very
efficient manner.
The material could also be used in applications where light is absorbed or
reflected. The scientists have also shown how it becomes possible to
 manufacture pressure sensors with it.
MM27NOV15







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