Main content

Elements: Titanium materials

Stronger and more durable than steel, this glamorous metal crops up in sportscars, planes and jewellery - but a new chemical process hopes one day to make it as common as steel.

Stronger and more durable than steel, this glamorous metal crops up in sportscars, hip replacements and jewellery - but a new chemical process hopes one day to make it as common as steel.
Prof Andrea Sella explains why this relatively widespread chemical element is so difficult to extract from its ore. Presenter Laurence Knight then heads to Yorkshire, where metallurgy pioneers Metalysis are trying to commercialise a novel way of doing just that - the so-called FFC Process.
We also visit Epsom hospital, south of London, where orthopaedic surgery head Philip Mitchell explains why titanium makes such great bone implants, and Philip Dewhurst of mineral consultancy Roskill casts doubts on whether titanium will ever become cheap and ubiquitous, at least in his lifetime.
(Picture: Hip implant; Credit: Photodisc/Thinkstock)

Available now

18 minutes

Last on

Wed 5 Aug 2015 16:05GMT

Broadcasts

  • Wed 5 Aug 2015 07:32GMT
  • Wed 5 Aug 2015 16:05GMT

Podcast