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Super nerdy jet engine and material science video
This is cool.
Each blade in a turbine is a single metallic crystal. Now I want one of the blades! LOL Now I'm curious how different the blades in a power plant are (if at all) from the blades in a passenger plane engine (and also military fighter jet engines which i suspect are a bit different again). <iframe width="1280" height="720" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/QtxVdC7pBQM" title="Why Don’t Jet Engines Melt?" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
I was going this route when I read the title.
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Wow, does that bring back memories. I've broken hundreds of those little hourglass-shaped test coupons in various kinds of material property tests.
I heard the Phds talking about the promise of growing single crystal turbine blades, but it hadn't been done yet. Much of the focus was on casting near-net blades to cut down on machining. The idea of casting net shape, single-crystal blades was science fiction. Until watching this, I didn't understand why single-crystal was important. But heck, I was just a lowly test engineer (You make em'. We break em'). Most of the work I did was on titanium compressor blade material and aluminum structural materials. |
I'll probably watch again to see if there are more details that I remember after a second time. Or maybe I'll look for other videos. I think there are more out there.
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There's a company called Precision Castparts in a Portland suburb. It's fun to cycle past because it smells just exactly like a box of crayons some days.
One of the things they make is turbine blades, and there was a writeup back in the day describing some of what is in that video. Good stuff. Humans can be outrageously smart sometimes. |
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Veritasiun is better than any non fiction network tv show ever. Watch regularly with my 14 yo son regularly
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Watch his video on entropy.
My personal favorite as a thermodynamics enthusiast |
We have single crystal blades in some of our newer power plant gas turbines.
And BTW, I had no idea how they made them until today, thanks! |
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Can I assume that the cost difference between those and the blades that aren't a single crystal is considerable? |
I consider myself to be pretty smart. Then I watch videos like this and realize I'm a moron.
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When they were showing the wax molds being assembled, I was wondering the purpose of the spiral section. Outstanding metallurgy.
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https://youtu.be/DxL2HoqLbyA?si=_8gZ6_5dxYf76dke Its a really great video even for less nerdy folks. |
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I showed that video (and a link to the channel’s page) to my partner, who is a science educator. She found herself almost 15 minutes into it before she realized she had to stop and go back to what she was doing! And this is a woman who has no technical interests whatsoever.
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