A ferrofluid is a liquid which
contains incredibly small pieces of a magnetic substance. Common
metals used are cobalt, magnetite and iron. It is important that
these pieces of metal be small enough that they remain in a
liquid state when exposed to a magnet. This threshold is
somewhere on the order of ten nanometers.
When many people use the term
ferrofluid, they are also referring to magnetorheological fluid,
a fluid similar in all ways to a ferrofluid, except that the
size of the particles is larger. This difference in size means
that the fluid becomes solid when exposed to a magnetic field,
then reverts to a fluid when the magnetic field is removed.
The particles in a ferrofluid
may be suspended in one of many different substances. The most
common fluids used are water and oil. Added to this basic fluid
is some sort of surfactant to make the fluid more stable.
One of the most important
military applications of a ferrofluid was in the late 1980s as a
form of radar-repulsion. Painted with a ferrofluid and
non-magnetic paints, airplanes are able to absorb radar waves
and remain invisible to radar when they pass overhead.
A number of exciting projects
are also underway utilizing both ferrofluid and
magnetorheological fluid. One of these looks at creating
light-weight, very flexible clothing which can be transformed
into heavy-duty body armor in less than one-hundredth of a
second by generating an electromagnetic field to transform the
fluids into a solid state. Ferrofluid is also used as a method
of cancer detection, in speakers and hard-drives, and for
sealing a wide range of devices.
Ferrofluid is capable of
operating in extreme temperatures, ranging from -55°C to 200°C
(-67°F to 392°F), making them ideal for any location on Earth
and particularly suited to space conditions. Since the fluid and
particulate matter used can be varied fairly widely, most
properties of a ferrofluid can be modified. Conductivity,
viscosity and volatility can all be affected to a wide degree,
allowing science and industry to customize ferrofluids to meet
specific needs.
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