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What material did an Iowa State engineer find conducts heat as well as metals?

What material did an Iowa State engineer find conducts heat as well as metals?

Answer: spider silk

Spider silk has some interesting properties: It's very strong, very stretchy, only 4 microns thick (human hair is about 60 microns) and, according to some speculation, could be a good conductor of heat. But nobody had actually tested spider silk for its thermal conductivity.

So Xinwei Wang, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Iowa State University, with partial support from the Army Research Office and the National Science Foundation, decided to try some lab experiments. Xiaopeng Huang, a post-doctoral research associate in mechanical engineering; and Guoqing Liu, a doctoral student in mechanical engineering, helped with the project, according to Iowa State.

What Wang and his research team found, according to the university, was that spider silks -- particularly the draglines that anchor webs in place -- conduct heat better than most materials, including very good conductors such as silicon, aluminum and pure iron. Spider silk also conducts heat 1,000 times better than woven silkworm silk and 800 times better than other organic tissues.