Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • In the early days of flight, engineers relied on building materials like wood and canvas

  • to build their planes. The Wright Brothers worked tirelessly to reduce the weight of

  • their aircraft to allow it get off the ground. They used woods with high strength to weight

  • ratios like spruce and ash to build their frame, but it needed to be reinforced with

  • steel wire to prevent the frame from bending under flight loads. The flight surfaces were

  • covered in lightweight fabric to provide a smooth aerodynamic surface. But one of their

  • greatest innovations was the construction of their engine. No engine existed at this

  • time that matched their power to weight requirements, so they went about inventing their own.

  • They were the first in history to use Aluminium as a building material for an engine, using

  • it to construct their crankcase. They even painted the engine black, so their competitors

  • couldn't see that the engine was built using aluminium.

  • Aluminium makes up 8% of the earth's crust. Despite that, it used to be one of the world's

  • most expensive materials. It is a difficult material to refine. Napoleon had envisioned

  • the lightweight metal as the perfect material for weapons and armour, but became frustrated

  • with the difficulty of the refining process. Finally giving up, he had his small supply

  • of aluminium melted down and made into cutlery and plates to serve his most esteemed guests,

  • while the lower ranks were resigned to the less expensive Gold pieces.

  • It wasn't until the 1880s that methods capable of mass producing the material were developed.

  • In a few short years, aluminium went from being the most expensive metal on Earth to

  • one of the cheapest. Dropping in price from $1200 per kilo in 1852 to just one dollar

  • per kilo at the start of the 20th century. This paved the way for the Wright Brothers

  • to use the material in the Wright Flyer, but the material the Wrights used was very different

  • to the Aluminium alloys we see today. Despite the availability of aluminium, planes throughout

  • world war 1 continued to use wood and canvas as their primary building materials, because

  • the aluminium that was available back then, was a weak and malleable.

  • An accidental discovery of a new heat treatment by the German scientist Alfred Wilm led to

  • the development of an aluminium alloy strong enough for structural use. Alfred was trying

  • to recreate the effects of quench hardening that is seen with iron alloys like steel,

  • you see this process a lot in the awesome Man at Arms series, after heating the steel

  • between 700 and 900 degrees they will quench the blade in oil or water, this rapidly cools

  • the steel, which causes a crystalline structure called martensite to form, which is much harder

  • than the crystal structure that would form if it was allowed to cool slowly. But this

  • technique does not work with aluminium.

  • As the story goes, one Friday afternoon Alfred was testing a new alloy of aluminium he had

  • developed, containing about 4% copper. He followed the steps for quench hardening. He

  • heated the metal up and allowed the heat to evenly distributed throughout the material,

  • he then removed the metal from the heat and quenched it, rapidly cooling it. He then tested

  • the material, but it showed no real sign of improvement. Becoming frustrated he left the

  • lab, leaving the remaining samples, resting at room temperature over the weekend.

  • To his amazement, when he returned the following Monday he discovered the remaining samples

  • had grown stronger. Alfred Wilm had just accidentally discovered age hardening. A process that would

  • make aluminium the world's new wonder material.

  • So what happened here, why did the new alloy get stronger over time? To understand this

  • we need to look at the metal's crystalline structure.

  • This is a single aluminium atom. Now if it is joined by more atoms they don't just arrange

  • randomly, they form regular patterns with a repeating structure. Aluminum forms a repeating

  • crystal structure called face centred cubic which looks like this and it defines many

  • of the properties of the material. One of these properties is direction it most easily

  • deforms, for example this crystal structure deforms most easily along this plane. This

  • is called a slip plane.

  • Let's look at a 2D cubic structure like this, it can easily slip in these parallel

  • directions, so if a force is applied here with sufficient force each atom will shift

  • down and the material will permanently deform, but this material is pure aluminium. What

  • happens when we swap some of these aluminium atoms for copper.

  • Copper atoms are slightly larger than aluminium and they create internal strain when fitting

  • into aluminium crystal lattice. When the alloy was heated, the copper spread evenly through

  • the material and the quenching process trapped the copper in these locations. In these positions,

  • the copper atoms do not provide much strength. But over time they begin to coalesce to form

  • these secondary crystal structures within the main crystal structure, this is a called

  • a second phase. These second phase particles create barriers to deformation, for deformation

  • to occur a much greater force is needed.

  • In the following years Alfred perfected this process, figuring out the ideal aging temperature

  • and time. He dubbed his new material Duralumin and it was used to build the world's first

  • all metal aircraft the Junkers J1.

  • The impact of this age hardened aluminium had cannot be understated, it completely transformed

  • our world. Prior to its introduction , planes frames were all built with rigid truss structures,

  • like this. With aluminium at their disposal, engineers could create a new type of flight

  • structure, the monocoque and semi-monocoque. With these frames the aluminium skin forms

  • an integral part of the planes strength, not just being used as a streamlined flight surface.

  • These new techniques freed up space within the planes and allowed spacious passenger

  • planes to be developed, ushering in a new era of travel in the world.

  • 13% of the world's aluminium is used by the energy sector, even though copper is a

  • better conductor, all main overhead power lines use aluminium as the conducting material.

  • To carry the same current as a copper wire an aluminium wire needs to 1.5 times thicker

  • and even then it is still two times lighter. This decreases the load on pylons and allows

  • the spans between them to increase dramatically. This saves vasts amount of money on construction.

  • 23 % of aluminium is used in construction. The Empire State Building was the world's

  • first skyscraper to use the material extensively. It's corrosion resistance and lightness

  • made it the perfect material for exterior framing and roofing.

  • It's clear to see, without this material the world we see today would be very different

  • and only recently has aluminium started to see competition from composite materials like

  • carbon reinforced plastics, but that's a topic for another day.

  • Thanks for watching. This video was sponsored by the vlogbrothers. I didn't even have to

  • put this message at the end, but I don't believe in getting something for nothing. So please

  • go check out Scishows latest video, the physics of the rollercoaster and consider subscribing.

  • If you have any questions feel free to ask me in the comments and if you would like to

  • support this channel the links for my patreon, instagram, facebook and twitter accounts are

  • below.

In the early days of flight, engineers relied on building materials like wood and canvas

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it