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Electrically Conductive Cement

zero_offset writes "The Tokyo Institute of Technology has announced a process for creating an inexpensive, nearly transparent, electrically conductive alumina cement. The conductivity is comparable to metal, and the transparency should be adequate for use in display panels. The process relies upon commonplace and inexpensive metals compared to the rare metals such as iridium currently used in display panels."

8 of 159 comments (clear)

  1. Indium by nuzak · · Score: 3, Informative

    RTFA, the rare metal in LCDs is Indium, not Iridium.

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  2. Cement != concrete by jfengel · · Score: 5, Informative

    Cement = anything used to glue things together

    Concrete = a building material composed of aggregates and cement

    Concrete is used for buildings, roads, sidewalks, etc. The aggregate in that case is usually rocks. The cement is usually Portland cement. It's not correct to call it "cement", though people will usually understand what you mean.

    But judging from the comments so far, not in this case. This isn't a replacement for Portland cement, and they're not talking about building materials. This is the kind of cement used to glue bits of LCD screens to each other.

  3. Home circuit fabs? by Teancum · · Score: 4, Informative

    When I read this, I was thinking of Fab@Home with the idea that perhaps you could use this process to help build crude home-built ICs out of simple and cheap materials.

    Unfortunately, it seems as though the process is a bit more complicated, and I don't know how you can get a nozzle heated to 1100 degrees C in a reduced oxygen environment (presumably why it is in a sealed glass tube to work) that would also be something you would want on your kitchen table.

    While of interest to a materials science guy, this really isn't that spectacular of a deal here. It does have the potential of improving LCD screen luminance values, reducing power requirements for laptops (the screen sucks quite a bit of power in the overall system), and helping in other ways. But it isn't something that simply can be poured out of a nozzle.

  4. Re:Never mind display panels... by freefrag · · Score: 5, Informative

    Urine streams do not conduct electricity because they separate into droplets.

  5. Mistakes in the article! by dr.+loser · · Score: 4, Informative

    The author of the actual paper is Hideo Hosono, not "Hideo Hono". The paper, available here, was not published in the April 11 issue of Nano Letters. Rather, it was published on-line on March 22.

  6. Re:Tokyo Institute of Technology: TiTech by abushga · · Score: 3, Informative

    The acronym is TiTech. These kids design pico-satellites and put them into low earth orbit, among other things.

  7. Re:Never mind display panels... by freefrag · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yah, Mythbusters busted that one.

  8. Re:Does anybody else remember conductive LEGOs? by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Informative

    Does anybody else remember the conductive LEGOs introduced with the 9V system?

    Uh, I don't know about yours, but my 9V LEGOs (such as in the monorail) weren't electrically conductive themselves; they just used regular plastic blocks with metal bits embedded in them. For example, see the pictures on this site.

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