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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Monday, February 06, 2023
The goal of advanced materials is to provide superior performance through enhanced properties.
FREMONT, CA: The term "advanced materials" (AdMs) refers to novel materials with enhanced qualities and superior performance that are purposefully designed. The significant scientific advancements of the 20th century and new knowledge of atoms paved the way for developing sophisticated materials. The advances over the previous three decades have allowed manufacturers to cross the conceptual hurdle and make sophisticated industrial materials an essential component of a high-tech economy.
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Innovations of the 21st century enable scientists to modify (inorganic and organic) substances at the atomic level and develop new, purpose-built materials that vastly exceed naturally occurring materials. In the previous three decades, a tremendous advancement has led to the successful integration of AdMs into high-tech manufacturing, medical processes, and food production.
In actuality, a new technological revolution is still on the verge of beginning. The next twenty years will likely witness a technological advancement surpassing the Industrial Revolution's progress. The only real constraints are the physical laws and human imagination (as yet independent of AI).
Advanced materials is a complex science area encompassing many subjects and applications. Advanced materials 101 defines advanced materials as a convenient generic phrase for any human-created novel material.
It is commonly used to refer to newly developed materials with high-tech uses throughout the past few decades. Research and development of novel, sophisticated materials for industrial purposes are multidisciplinary, drawing on knowledge from chemistry, physics, nanotechnology, ceramics, metallurgy, and biomaterials, among others.
The advantages of modern industrial materials are straightforward in general, and the items they bring may be more affordable, more advanced, and easier to use. Household goods, personal automobiles, and durable consumer goods are already enhancing the quality of life, conserving labor, and enhancing pleasure.
Similar advances are also occurring in the workplace. Advanced industrial materials are transforming the devices, systems, and infrastructures that once defined and constrained how manufacturers operate and conduct business. Methods of production, print-on-demand technology, emerging quantum computers, collecting and analyzing data, and applying AI to design monitoring and problem-solving are expanding, as are the reach and potential of enterprises. The use of advanced materials in the industry has already affected daily lives, whether manufacturers like it.
One of the most significant emerging benefits of modern materials is the tremendous improvement of the most fundamental needs, namely health and food security. More diseases became preventable or curable, and more (formerly deadly) injuries became treated throughout the twentieth century than at any other time in human history. Hopefully, the following two decades will surpass these past achievements on every imaginable (and previously unimaginable) level.
The combination of new advanced biomaterials, advanced inorganic materials, and tiny, AI-driven smart devices will create a new generation of smart prostheses that successfully replace body parts. They will provide amputees with nearly perfect or even increased function. Previously implausible notions, such as organically grown or regenerated body parts, lab-grown retinas or internal organs, and regenerated skin for burn sufferers, are advancing and approaching conceptual plausibility.
Nanotechnology is already being utilized in topical creams containing advanced biochemical components and smart medications that may be customized for optimal individual therapy. Scientists can already control cells, viruses, and organisms, and new technologies are driving a shift toward personalized and preventative healthcare.
The global population will surpass 9.5 billion by 2050. The human race faces the dual challenges of meeting the United Nations Friendly Development Goal of Zero Hunger while pursuing Zero Carbon and environmentally sustainable agriculture.
Innovative materials and production methods can bridge this gap. For human consumption, lab-created sophisticated biomaterials and proteins, such as 3D-printed meats, are another concept that is becoming commercially practical. New, nutritionally dense, and healthful foods have the potential to significantly disrupt the global food market. This introduction to improved materials for food production includes sufficient advancements to feed the globe.
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