
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Quentin Cooper takes a look at the new materials that can mend themselves. Researchers are currently developing bacteria in concrete which, once awakened, excrete lime to fill any cracks. In South America you can choose a car paint that heals its own scratches. And there are even gold atoms which can migrate to mend tiny breaks in jet turbine blades.
Engineers normally design things so the likelihood of breaking is minimised. But by embracing the inevitability of breakage, a new class of materials which can mend cracks and fissures before you can see them may extend the lives of our cars, engines, buildings and aeroplanes far beyond current capability.
(Image: Presenter, Quentin Cooper, BBC Copyright)
By BBC World Service4.4
940940 ratings
Quentin Cooper takes a look at the new materials that can mend themselves. Researchers are currently developing bacteria in concrete which, once awakened, excrete lime to fill any cracks. In South America you can choose a car paint that heals its own scratches. And there are even gold atoms which can migrate to mend tiny breaks in jet turbine blades.
Engineers normally design things so the likelihood of breaking is minimised. But by embracing the inevitability of breakage, a new class of materials which can mend cracks and fissures before you can see them may extend the lives of our cars, engines, buildings and aeroplanes far beyond current capability.
(Image: Presenter, Quentin Cooper, BBC Copyright)

7,878 Listeners

853 Listeners

1,075 Listeners

5,580 Listeners

1,800 Listeners

1,752 Listeners

1,037 Listeners

2,010 Listeners

602 Listeners

753 Listeners

93 Listeners

411 Listeners

425 Listeners

822 Listeners

766 Listeners

745 Listeners

232 Listeners

364 Listeners

474 Listeners

241 Listeners

3,218 Listeners

791 Listeners

115 Listeners

1,011 Listeners