Graphene Body Armor Will Be Twice as Good as Regular Bullet-Proof Vests
Gizmodo
Jamie Condliffe
11/28/2014
Excerpt:
We know that graphene is super strong, so it should stand to reason that it would be a sensible—if expensive—choice for body armor. Now, scientists have demonstrated that it's twice as effective as the material currently used to make bullet-proof vests.
Researchers from the University of Massachusetts-Amherst have been investigating how graphene stands up to the onslaught of high-speed projectiles. To do that, they set up a kind of mico-gun range. They used lasers to vaporize filaments of gold, which in turn shot out a micron-size glass bullet at 3,000 meters per second. Aimed at between 10 and 100 sheets of graphene, it was then possible to work out how it stood up to high-velocity projectiles.
Turns out, pretty well! The researchers discovered that graphene absorbs huge amounts of kinetic energy, stretching into a cone at the point of impact and then cracking outwards from that point in the radial direction. Despite the cracks, it's still twice as good at absorbing impacts as kevlar, and a staggering 10 times better than steel.
People have speculated in the past that graphene would make wonderful body armor—because as well as being strong it's also very light—but this is the first time anyone's demonstrated that it can stand up incredibly well to high-speed impact. It might be a while before graphene body armor becomes a reality—but at least we now know that, when it is, it's going to work damn well. ...
View the complete article, including photo, at:
http://gizmodo.com/graphene-body-arm...-bu-1664320431
Gizmodo
Jamie Condliffe
11/28/2014
Excerpt:
We know that graphene is super strong, so it should stand to reason that it would be a sensible—if expensive—choice for body armor. Now, scientists have demonstrated that it's twice as effective as the material currently used to make bullet-proof vests.
Researchers from the University of Massachusetts-Amherst have been investigating how graphene stands up to the onslaught of high-speed projectiles. To do that, they set up a kind of mico-gun range. They used lasers to vaporize filaments of gold, which in turn shot out a micron-size glass bullet at 3,000 meters per second. Aimed at between 10 and 100 sheets of graphene, it was then possible to work out how it stood up to high-velocity projectiles.
Turns out, pretty well! The researchers discovered that graphene absorbs huge amounts of kinetic energy, stretching into a cone at the point of impact and then cracking outwards from that point in the radial direction. Despite the cracks, it's still twice as good at absorbing impacts as kevlar, and a staggering 10 times better than steel.
People have speculated in the past that graphene would make wonderful body armor—because as well as being strong it's also very light—but this is the first time anyone's demonstrated that it can stand up incredibly well to high-speed impact. It might be a while before graphene body armor becomes a reality—but at least we now know that, when it is, it's going to work damn well. ...
View the complete article, including photo, at:
http://gizmodo.com/graphene-body-arm...-bu-1664320431