That's Some Smart Metal!
That's Some Smart Metal!
That's Some Smart Metal!
Smart materials respond to things that happen around them. This activity demonstrates the properties of
one smart material: Nitinol. Nitinol is a mixture of two different metals: nickel and titanium. Nitinol stands for
Ni (nickel), Ti (titanium), and Naval Ordnance Laboratory, the place where it was discovered in 1965. What
makes Nitinol so smart? Find out!
In this activity, you will demonstrate the shape memory properties of Nitinol by shaping and heating samples.
Materials
Pre-activity
Use your senses to observe the Nitinol wire. Is it soft? Hard? Stretchy? What materials is it like?
How would it be different if it were thinner? Thicker?
Activity
Question: If you bend a paper clip, or other wire out of shape, and then heat it up, what happens? Try it!
How does Nitinol behave differently from other wires? What are the differences between Nitinol and other
wires?
1
Nitinol wire may be purchased at the following websites, as well as other sources:
Educational Innovations: www.teachersource.com
Images SI, Inc.: www.imagesco.com
Livewire: www.tinialloy.com/livewire.html
bit, but this makes a huge difference in how the metal feels and
behaves. At lower temperatures, Nitinol is soft and easy to bend. At
hotter temperatures, it is stiff and springy.
How does that make Nitinol a smart material? When it’s in
its low-temperature structure, when you heat it up, it will change to
its high-temperature structure. It bounces back to its original shape
when that change happens. When you heated the wire up using the
hair dryer, you caused the Nitinol to change from one phase to the
other, and it went back to the shape it was in before you bent it. This Image Courtesy of Memry Corporation (www.memry.com)
Extension Activity 1
Materials
Activity
Extension Activity 2
What other materials in your house have memory? A rubber band will go back to its original size when
you stretch it and then let go. What happens if you stretch a rubber band around a large object and leave it for
awhile? Does it go back to its original size?
Can you think of any other materials in your house that have memory?
Vocabulary
Atom: The smallest piece of matter that has all the properties of a certain element. An atom consists of a
nucleus with protons and usually neutrons, orbited by a cloud of electrons.
Nitinol: An alloy of Nickel and Titanium that returns to its previous shape when you heat it up.
Phase: a specific form of matter that exists within a certain range of temperature and pressure. This includes
gas, liquid, solid and plasma. A material may have several solid phases that exist at different temperatures
and pressures.
References
Teaching General Chemistry: A Materials Science Companion. Arthur B. Ellis, Margret J. Gesselbracht,
Brian J. Johnson, George C. Lisensky and William R. Robinson. Published by the American Chemical
Society, 1993.
Special Thanks to Memry Corporation and Stiquito.com for use of images.