| | |   Rind of sputtering target. This is the first of several variations of this material I will be posting.  Aluminum is widely used for sputtering, a process in which metal is vaporized off a target in a vacuum chamber and deposed in a thin layer on the surface of something else.  For example the shiny layer in a CD or DVD disk is sputtered aluminum.  To do this you need a sputtering target made of the material you want to deposit.
 This very interesting piece of aluminum is scrap from the production of such a target.  They started with a cylinder of very pure aluminum and, using tremendous pressure, squashed it down into a pancake about 2" thick and 18" in diameter.  Then they sawed off (using a water jet) the outside rim of the pancake to leave a perfect disk.  This piece is a slice of the rim that was cut off.
 What's most remarkable about it is the strange bumpy ridged surface.  I assumed at first it must be formed by some sort of electrodeposition process, as are many bumpy surfaces you'll see typically on raw high-purity metals.  But in fact it is formed in a purely mechanical process as the disk is pressed down.  There must be internal crystal structures that are sliding and a bumping into each other in way that creates this surface.  I will be posting more variations of this material, including a full disk before the rind was cut off, which will show in more detail the strange ridges you see on closer examination.
 Source: eBay seller mrj33
 Contributor: Theodore Gray
 Acquired: 8 December, 2007
 Text Updated: 8 December, 2007
 Price: $40
 Size: 5"
 Purity: 99.9996%
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