Submitted by Sorin61 t3_z5v1h4 in technology
bannacct56 t1_ixz2wrq wrote
Reply to comment by danielravennest in Space Elevators Are Less Sci-Fi Than You Think by Sorin61
The problem with carbon fiber is not the strength, it's strong enough but we do not yet know how to braid glue, stick these pieces together so they do not unravel. A
4onen t1_iy02jyw wrote
Partially true. If we could manufacture 100km single-crystal graphene (e.g. carbon fiber but sheets) then that would be sufficiently strong, and to prevent unravelling you could literally use something as weak and heavy as scotch tape to hold different ribbons of the graphene together. More ribbons, more tape, bigger and stronger cable.
The problem is the single-crystal manufacturing, which we can't do. Without it, we need a high-tensile-strength glue to hold the strands we can manufacture together. No such glue exists, especially not one that could connect via polar and/or van-der-walls bonds to the graphene.
Ergo, no space elevator, yet.
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