Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Tapping Titanium's Colorful Potential: Color Coded Nuclear Waste Containers And More

A new, cost-effective process for colouring titanium can be used in manufacturing products from sporting equipment to colour-coded nuclear waste containers.

How the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, could look if it had been built using coloured titanium.
Credit: Queen's University

“The new method uses an electrochemical solution to produce coloured titanium, improving on an older, time-consuming and expensive method where heat was used to develop a coloured layer,” says Gregory Jerkiewicz, a professor in the Department of Chemistry.

Dr. Jerkiewicz’s new technique can be finely tuned to produce over 80 different shades of basic colours. In addition, the coloured titanium produced using the new method remains crack-free and stable for many years.

Coloured titanium has the potential to be used in the production of everyday objects like spectacle frames, jewelry, golf clubs and high-performance bicycles.

Industries including healthcare, aviation and the military could use the technology to create items like colour-coded surgical tools, brightly coloured airplane parts, and stealth submarines made from blue titanium.

For more details, please see the original research paper.

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