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Fibrous stainless steel

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Fibrous stainless steel
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Attribution: Fibrous stainless steel Dr Zoe Laughlin is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
    Fibrous stainless steel
    Fibrous stainless steel
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    Fibrous stainless steel

    These super fine wisps of grey fluff are in fact tiny filaments of stainless steel. Each strand is around a 10th of the thickness of a human hair and make for form of steel like no other – one that is soft and able to be spun into yarns and woven into cloth. If you hold a magnet against the fibres you can see each little hair rise and fall. It still has the weight of steel and is for some a skin irritant as the super fine fibres can tickle. The fibres can be combined with other materials to produce a variety of effects like embedded conductivity and structural reinforcement. Explore fibrous stainless steel on the Institute of Making website: https://www.instituteofmaking.org.uk/materials-library/material/fibrous-stainless-steel.

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