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Beany baby! Where ya bean? |
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As to the idea, is your point that the gallium-filled tubes are supposed to be more electrically conductive than regular copper wire? Or is it that the pumped gallium carries away heat better? |
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He's suggesting that carbon tubes full of gallium will do both. |
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//He's suggesting that carbon tubes full of gallium will do both.// That can't be - I have but one bone to give. |
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Also, why carbon tubes rather than copper? |
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Will gallium flooded carbon nanotubes engineer better,
faster free flowing electron paths? I don't |
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//Also, why carbon tubes rather than copper?// |
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To avoid certain undesirable properties that arise when you make nano ones (link). |
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Not in Monopoly it's not. |
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So nobody likes a Baltic Avenue slumlord. Got it. |
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This is rather interesting, but obviously you need
something magnetic and gallium unfortunately isn't. |
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[RayfordSteele], the Gallium is for the electric field (instead of Copper) so doesn't need to be magnetic.
I would be worried about the Gallium and carbon tubes not playing nice. Can (liquid) Gallium be piped through tiny capilliaries? |
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Seems that it doesn't "wet" graphite, so it might flow OK, although the thermal conductivity is a bit low (considering one of the reasons to use it is to provide heat transfer). |
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I think you'll do much better forming heat pipes from the carbon with an appropriate vaporizing liquid. |
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I thought of using mercury, but according to
Wolfram|Alpha its specific heat capacity and thermal
conductivity are much lower than gallium's. I can't tell if
it's using solid or liquid gallium without comparing the
number it gives to another source, which is too much
work, though, so take that with a grain of salt. I also
asked about Field's metal, but Wolfram|Alpha doesn't
know what that is. |
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