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Friday, April 20, 2012
iPhone 5: Something New Waiting For You
Posted on 4:48 PM by Admin

Apple uses liquidmetal for the SIM ejector tool in the iPhone box.
The
material known as liquidmetal is not actually liquid. It was discovered
back in 1992 at the California Institute of Technology and it’s made of
a mix of titanium, nickel, copper, and zirconium, among other metals.
The resulting material is very tough, light, and it’s said to feel as
smooth as liquid or glass when touched; hence the name.
Liquidmetal has been used in various consumer electronics and gadgets
by now due to its special properties: it’s very durable, it has the
lightness of plastic, it’s scratch resistant and smooth to the touch.
SanDisk used it for one of its Cruzer USB flash drives and Sansa MP3-players, as well as in certain Vertu phones under Nokia’s umbrella.
The material has also been used in jewelry, medical devices,
sporting items such as golf clubs, and even in phones for hinges,
antennas, and cases, since 2003 when the California Institute of
Technology team organized a firm to market it under Liquidmetal Technologies.
Apple and Liquidmetal

Further
use of liquidmetal in a new iPhone would mean that Apple is exploring
uses of the technology beyond a small pin to take out your SIM card. A
liquidmetal case for the iPhone means that the phone won’t be as
scratch-prone as its siblings with a glass back, lighter, and less
likely to shatter into pieces if you drop it.
The use of the material for the phone case would also allow for a
slimmer profile of the iPhone, as well as make it stand out against
other smartphone manufactures, which are still mainly using various
types of plastic for their devices. So while liquidmetal might sound
strange, if it makes it into the next iPhone, we might see one of the
most durable and slim smartphones so far.
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