Scientists create 'Superwood' that's 10 times stronger than steel
Scientists create 'Superwood' that's 10 times stronger than steel

Scientists create ‘Superwood’ that’s 10 times stronger than steel | CNN

Scientists create 'Superwood' that's 10 times stronger than steel
Scientists create ‘Superwood’ that’s 10 times stronger than steel | CNN
neat!
But... but that's... that's part of the thing. That you just said improved. The 'weight' part in 'strength-to-weight'.
Yes, but they are different values.
The company's own website lists "weight" as a separate row item in their performance comparison chart
https://www.inventwood.com/technology
I think it means 10 times strength-to-weight, and 6 times strength-to-volume size
If i had to guess then I'd guess they mean lighter by volume. Like if an i-beam made of steel weighs 6 tons, then the same size i-beam made using superwood would weigh 1 ton.
I.e. it's 10 times better in strength-to-weight, and it's 6 times better in strength-to-volume.
This is just my guess at interpreting what they tried to say
There's a great video on YouTube by NileRed, basically they soak the wood in stuff to make the cellulose soft, then then compress the hell out of it with some heat evaporating the chemical and making smushy strong wood.
Keeping strength constant, a superwood beam would weigh 10 times less (with some reduction in volume).
Keeping volume constant, a superwood beam would weigh 6 times less (with some improvement in strength)
I don't understand the confusion. Isn't lighter material an improvement?
Yes it is, but it's already covered. I'm memeing on the the text.
It's like saying "you need less fuel per mile/kilometer and you need less fuel".
You can't just say, "you need less fuel", because it always depends on how much you actually drive and that kind of measure is already the "liters per kilometer", so the second part of the sentence is just nonsense. Which makes me question if the person writing about it, understood any part of what they're writing about.