Today, advanced materials have properties that go above and beyond everyday materials like steel, aluminium, and titanium to reach new levels of performance, opening up the possibility of previously unthought-of applications. Composite materials have already revolutionised the transport industry, while advanced metal alloys are critical to everything from modern medicine to gas turbines and the oil and gas industry. For the engineer, advanced materials offer new functionality and provide a potential means of conserving resources, improving sustainability, and diminishing the impact of manufacturing on the environment.
Advanced materials and alloys now include not only metals, composites, plastics, and ceramics but also organic materials and processes that manipulate them at a cellular level. For example, nanotechnology has emerged as a means of manipulating materials with special characteristics that can influence biological, chemical, and physical behaviour at a scale of between one and 100 nanometres. Using advanced materials at this minuscule level will influence innovation in medicine, for sure, but also provide the impetus for new consumer products, types of energy systems, and forms of advanced manufacturing techniques.
In the future, advanced materials are expected to play a role in the development of new supercapacitor technology for storing intermittent renewable energy, and tiny materials that change their shape to store data in computer memory. Advanced metals, ceramics, and composites are also playing a key role in the development of new and improved additive manufacturing (3D printing) technology, while artificial intelligence is being used to refine and develop new types of corrosion-resistant alloy.
When it comes to advanced materials and industry, it seems the only limit to their use is our imagination (or that of our computers).
Do you want to know more about semiconductors? Read the RS introduction here.