Lead becomes stronger than steel under extreme pressures

The metal is typically soft and easily scratched

lead

Lead is normally a soft metal, but squeeze it to extreme pressures and it becomes hard and strong.

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Lead performs under pressure.

Under normal conditions, the metal is relatively soft, easily scratched with a fingernail. But when compressed under extreme pressures, lead becomes hard and strong — even stronger than steel, scientists report November 11 in Physical Review Letters.

To study how lead’s strength changed under pressure, researchers rapidly compressed a lead sample by blasting it with lasers at the National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California. The pressure within the sample reached about 400 gigapascals — similar to the pressures found within Earth’s core.

The strength of a material characterizes its response to stress — a force applied over a given area. The more stress that a substance can endure before it deforms, the stronger it is. Physicist Andrew Krygier of Lawrence Livermore and colleagues observed how ripples in the lead grew and deformed under the high-pressure conditions. The growth was relatively slow, indicating that the metal was 250 times as strong as lead under normal conditions and about 10 times as strong as high-strength steel.

When materials are compressed, their properties can change dramatically. For example, hydrogen, normally a gas, can turn into a metal (SN: 8/10/16). Understanding how substances change in response to pressure might be important for improving designs of protective gear such as bulletproof vests (SN: 6/20/19).

Calculations suggest that the pressure alters lead’s crystal structure, causing a rearrangement of its lattice of atoms. That structural change results in a stronger metal, the researchers conclude.

Physics writer Emily Conover has a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Chicago. She is a two-time winner of the D.C. Science Writers’ Association Newsbrief award.

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