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The early days of nitinol wire


A Brief History of Nitinol – Kellogg's Research Labs

Nitinol was discovered by a brilliant young scientist named William J. Buehler. Buehler was a metallurgist at the Naval Ordinance Labs (NOL), working on a ...

The early days of nitinol wire - Orthodontic Practice US

Dr. George Andreason, Chairman of the Orthodontic Department at the University of Iowa Dental College, had begun to work with nitinol wire.

Everything You Need To Know About Nitinol

Nitinol originated in 1959 by mistake. Scientists were developing a heat and corrosive resistant alloy and during that process, created an alloy made of 55% ...

A Historical Perspective - Confluent Medical

The history of steel dates thousands of years to ancient times, stainless steel has been prominent for about a hundred years, and Nitinol for perhaps a ...

Shape Memory History - Intrinsic Devices

In 1962 the shape memory effect is discovered in NiTi alloys by the US Naval Ordnance Lab. The nominally equiatomic NiTi alloy was dubbed Nitinol.

History of Nitinol - Images Scientific Instruments Inc

Although scientists have known about and experimented with SMA's since 1932, it wasn't until 1962 that the materials came out of the laboratory.

Our history: Nitinol stone extractors | Urology - Cook Medical

It wasn't long after nitinol had made its way into medical devices that engineers at Cook Medical began to incorporate nitinol wire into an extractor that could ...

Nitinol - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics

Nitinol is a shape memory alloy (SMA) composed of nickel and titanium. The use of nitinol is ubiquitous in endovascular stents and has proven both safe and ...

Special Metal Spotlight: Nitinol | Ulbrich

In fact, Nitinol's many uses have mostly all been realized since the mid-1990s when its usefulness in a broad range of applications results ...

An Overview of Nitinol: Superelastic and Shape Memory

Nitinol, which saw use in medical devices beginning in the late 1980s, stands for Nickel Titanium Naval Ordnance Laboratory. Fig. 1 – Nitinol ...

The Metal With A Memory | Invention & Technology Magazine

The work that resulted in the discovery of nitinol began in early 1958. Buehler was testing intermetallic compounds for the nose cone of the Navy's below-the- ...

Nickel titanium - Wikipedia

Different alloys are named according to the weight percentage of nickel; e.g., nitinol 55 and nitinol 60. Nickel Titanium. Nitinol wires. Material properties.

Nitinol Technical Basic FAQ - Kellogg's Research Labs

Nitinol is the trade name attributed to the nearly equiatomic binary mixture of nickel and titanium,which exhibits SuperElastic and Shape Memory properties.

Realizing Practical Nitinol Locomotion Project - NASA TechPort

In 1973, Nitinol was used to create the first solid state heat engine, and memory alloys currently have the potential to considerably change thermal energy ...

An Overview of the Nitinol - Stanford Advanced Materials

In nitinol, the austenite is called the mother phase, which is the crystal phase shown by alloy at high temperature. When the temperature ...

How Muscle Wire Works Motorless Mechanical Motion

Although thin and lightweight, one of the most amazing things about Nitinol shape memory wires is that they can lift many times their weight and are able to do ...

Everything You Need to Know About Nitinol Wire

The nitinol cable made at Carl Stahl Sava Industries is composed of a central strand of nitinol, wrapped in six, non-shape memory alloy (SMA) ...

What Is Nitinol? - Metal Supermarkets

Shape Memory of Nitinol ... Perhaps even more extraordinary is the ability for Nitinol to remember its shape. If a piece of Nitinol wire is formed ...

What is NiTiNol?!? Nitinol wire and examples! - YouTube

... NiTiNol memory wire history and explanation. 01:42 Experiments with nickel titanium shape memory alloy 02:24 Electric current through nitinol ...

Nitinol Challenges in Medical Device Manufacturing | CWT

One important breakthrough has been the emergence of nickel-titanium (nitinol, NiTi), which was first used in medical devices in the late 1980s.