zibby43 wrote: ↑15 Nov 2019, 06:35
atanatizante wrote: ↑15 Nov 2019, 02:29
zibby43 wrote: ↑15 Nov 2019, 00:45
I recently learned (and maybe it has already been discussed in this thread and I missed it) that Ferrari uses a special synthetic liquid in their cooling systems (whereas all the other teams use water).
I think I read graphene, but someone with further knowledge is more than welcome to chime in.
Yeah, it seems that Ferrari is using a new coolant based from the Australian FlexeGRAPH company. It`s based on using carbon structures called graphene - the toughest material made by human up to date. As a secondary benefit due to their special tubular structure, graphene a has much higher heat/thermal capacity hence a much better heat transfer. The said that: "
FlexeGRAPH has developed nano-fluids with graphene as the active ingredient. FlexeGRAPH nano-fluids feature suspended graphene particles that conduct heat 10,000X better than water. This provides a significant improvement in thermal conductivity over standard liquid coolants and has applications across many industries., according to their site:
https://flexegraph.com/
They also say their new coolant allows up to 60% improved heat exchange compared with market-leading materials.
Thank you so much for sharing that detailed information. Fascinating stuff.
My pleasure
...
Imagine such advance Ferrari has on ICE cooling hence running in higher modes both on qualy and the race...
This is something Merc has lacked this year and particularly with their 3rd spec engine and in retrospective, their last 3 wins worth more consideration...
But more important is that cooling hampered Merc not only for allowing them not to run in higher PU modes but also indirectly stopping Petronas` new fuel updates, something that brings the bigger gains nowadays both from HP increase side and higher PU race modes side point of view ...