Yugica
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2021
Even though this thread seems to be mostly shitposting, I feel like posting an idea I had for an invention last night. The idea is a kind of enclosed-space welding device, namely its purpose is to very firmly attach onto a surface and create a seal. The chamber it attaches on is then filled in with an inert(think N2) or noble gas(like argon, noble gases are preferred too) to prevent certain kinds of erosion. Then welding occurs, guided by the operator.
What would make this device special is its usage of the more recently discovered "electroadhesion" for the blocks. The blocks themselves would be more like sponges and would have a more gelatinous material in them that would itself be able to electroadhese onto a surface, whilst the spongey material provides more rigid support to prevent pressure differentials within the welder to break the seal or collapse the structure. This would be the kind of thing you'd use to weld titanium plates as titanium can not normally be welded easily under atmospheric gases due to its reactivity(and also it doesn't like to stick onto other things).
The great thing about electroadhesion is that it provides a reversible gluing of a material onto another material. Its interactions being more molecular in nature too means that it should form a vacuum-tight seal with many different materials in a very rapid amount of time -- all of which is reversible by simply changing the polarity of the current.
Here's a shitty diagram for it. If you end up patenting or using the design make sure to include that you got it off of this forum (:.
Here's also a nice video I first learned about electroadhesion from:
What would make this device special is its usage of the more recently discovered "electroadhesion" for the blocks. The blocks themselves would be more like sponges and would have a more gelatinous material in them that would itself be able to electroadhese onto a surface, whilst the spongey material provides more rigid support to prevent pressure differentials within the welder to break the seal or collapse the structure. This would be the kind of thing you'd use to weld titanium plates as titanium can not normally be welded easily under atmospheric gases due to its reactivity(and also it doesn't like to stick onto other things).
The great thing about electroadhesion is that it provides a reversible gluing of a material onto another material. Its interactions being more molecular in nature too means that it should form a vacuum-tight seal with many different materials in a very rapid amount of time -- all of which is reversible by simply changing the polarity of the current.
Here's a shitty diagram for it. If you end up patenting or using the design make sure to include that you got it off of this forum (:.
Here's also a nice video I first learned about electroadhesion from:



