Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
From The Floor
A Brief History of Civilian Drones
Scan of the Month
Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation) CT Teardown
Materials World
Apple Rethinks Paper Packaging
Design to Reality
Apple vs. Meta: Same Problem, Different Answers
The Quality Gap
Behind the Battery Report
The Quality Gap
Blind Spots in Electronics Quality
Design to Reality
Building for the Brain: Pioneering a Long-Term Neural Implant
Design to Reality
CT Teardown: AirPods Pro (3rd Generation)
Recall Radar
Defective On Arrival
The Quality Gap
Do Water Filters Actually Work?
Design to Reality
Eight Years to Redesign a Ketchup Cap
Design to Reality
Evolution of the Plastic Bottle
Recall Radar
Fall on Fire
From The Floor
Finding Lead in Stanley's Quencher
Design to Reality
Furbo and KONG: Two Ways to Give a Dog a Treat
Recall Radar
Hidden Failures of Everyday Interfaces
Design to Reality
How Does a Car Cigarette Lighter Work?
Scan of the Month
How Four Pens Solve the Same Problem
From The Floor
How Ground Truth Data Builds Trust Between OEMs and Suppliers
Design to Reality
How I Think About R&D (and Turning Ideas Into Products)
The Quality Gap
How People Drive Quality
From The Floor
How Saucony Uses CT to Build Better Running Shoes
Design to Reality
How SawStop Stops a Saw Blade in 5 Milliseconds
Materials World
How We Learned to Hold a Bit Still
Materials World
How the Wine Industry Engineered Around Cork's One Flaw
From The Floor
How to Read a Plastic Bottle
From The Floor
Inside a 12‑Month Sprint from Concept to Factory‑Ready Product
Scan of the Month
Inside the Nintendo Switch 2 Joy-Cons
From The Floor
Malicious Hardware Hidden in Plain Sight
From The Floor
Manufacturing in 2026: Less Disruption, More Discipline
Materials World
Materials That Make or Break a Shoe
Design to Reality
Not All USB-C Cables Are the Same
Design to Reality
Nothing Ear 3 Has Nothing to Hide
Recall Radar
Parts Under Pressure
Design to Reality
Pulling the Thread on Talenti’s Stubborn Lids
The Quality Gap
Reshoring's Hidden Constraint: Quality
Recall Radar
Routine Uses, Real Risks
Recall Radar
Safety Gaps That Keep Shipping
Materials World
Seashell Architecture
Materials World
Speaking in Steel and Sapphire: MING’s 20.01 Series 5
Recall Radar
Stored Energy Meets Soft Spots
From The Floor
The Missing Middle in Battery Manufacturing
Design to Reality
The Pink Tax: Are Men's and Women's Razors Actually Different?
Recall Radar
Tolerance Tested
Recall Radar
Too Hot, Too Sharp, Too Loose
Scan of the Month
We CT Scanned a Bag of Chips and 3D Printed the Results
Design to Reality
What Are Counterfeit Batteries?
The Quality Gap
What Counterfeit Apple Products Look Like on the Inside
The Quality Gap
What Food Manufacturers Can't See
Scan of the Month
What Medical Connectors Have to Get Right
Design to Reality
What QMSR Means for Medical Device Product Lifecycle Management
Materials World
What Roasting Does to a Coffee Bean, Seen From the Inside
The Quality Gap
What Went Wrong Inside These Recalled Power Banks?
Scan of the Month
What's Inside a Contactless Credit Card
Design to Reality
What's Inside the World's Fastest Marathon Shoes
The Quality Gap
What’s Hiding Inside Haribo’s Power Bank and Headphones?
Materials World
What’s Inside a Battery?
From The Floor
Your Toner Cartridge Is Lying to You
Materials World
October 2024

How the Wine Industry Engineered Around Cork's One Flaw

In this Article:

  • CT scans of three wine cork types reveal fundamentally different internal structures: natural cork shows a variable lenticel network of porous channels cut perpendicular to the grain to prevent direct oxygen paths, DIAM technical cork shows a uniform granular distribution produced by grinding natural cork and recombining its suberin with polymer microspheres, and NOMACORC synthetic cork shows a porous foam core encased in a dense extruded skin.
  • Natural cork's biological variability produces inconsistent oxygen ingress rates and TCA contamination risk in one to three percent of bottles; DIAM removes TCA through supercritical CO2 extraction and controls porosity through manufacturing, though long-term aging data beyond twenty years is still accumulating; NOMACORC offers a specified oxygen transmission rate of 3.1 mg in year one and 1.7 mg annually thereafter, with no TCA risk.
  • The choice between closures reflects a winemaker's position on a tradeoff between biological provenance and manufactured consistency, with natural cork still favored for wines intended to age for decades and engineered alternatives gaining ground for everything else.
10.15.2024

Cork has sealed wine bottles for roughly four centuries, and for most of that time the material was taken for granted. It came from the bark of a tree, it worked, and that was enough. Then winemakers started noticing that some bottles tasted like wet cardboard, and the industry began paying very close attention to what cork actually is and how it actually works.

The problem had a name: TCA, or trichloroanisole, a compound that forms when certain mold species interact with chlorine compounds in the cork during production. A contaminated cork doesn't ruin a wine dramatically. It muffles it, replacing fruit and complexity with a damp, musty flatness. Estimates of how often this happens range from one to three percent of bottles sealed with natural cork, which at global wine production volumes represents an enormous amount of spoiled wine. The industry response was two decades of materials engineering, producing alternatives that now compete directly with the original. CT imaging lets us compare all three.

Natural cork

Natural cork is harvested from the bark of the cork oak every nine to twelve years without harming the tree, then cut into bottle stoppers against the grain. That orientation is deliberate. Cork's cellular structure includes channels called lenticels, porous structures that facilitate gas exchange in the living tree. If a stopper were cut with the grain, those channels would run straight through the cork from bottle to atmosphere. Cut perpendicular to the grain, the lenticular channels are interrupted by denser cell wall material, and the cork provides a seal.

The CT scan shows that structure directly. The faint diagonal lines running across the cork are growth rings, and we can count nine of them, representing nine years of growth. The speckled pattern throughout the body of the cork is the lenticel network: lower-density voids surrounded by higher-density cell walls. The material is not uniform, and it was never meant to be. Natural variability is inherent to the biology.

That variability is also the source of the TCA problem and of inconsistent oxygen ingress, the rate at which small amounts of air permeate the cork and interact with the wine during aging. Some oxygen is beneficial and necessary for wine development. Too much oxidizes the wine prematurely; too little and certain wines never open up. With natural cork, winemakers are making a bet on a biological material that varies from tree to tree and harvest to harvest.

DIAM technical cork

DIAM was developed in the early 2000s to solve both problems. The process starts with natural cork, ground into granules, then blasted with supercritical CO2 to extract TCA and other volatile compounds. The cork's suberin, the elastic biopolymer that gives cork its compressibility, is separated from lignin, which is less elastic and discarded. The suberin granules are then combined with microscopic polymer microspheres that fill the voids between particles, reducing porosity in a controlled way, and the mixture is formed into uniform stoppers.

The CT scan of a DIAM 5 cork shows the result: a strikingly even distribution of material throughout the stopper, with none of the irregular void structure of the natural cork. The density is consistent from one end to the other. The corkscrew's path through the material is visible and unambiguous, where in the natural cork the self-healing cellular structure tends to close around the screw after extraction. The DIAM process appears to reduce that self-healing behavior, which is visible in the scan as a cleaner, more defined channel.

The tradeoff is that DIAM is still accumulating long-term aging data. Natural cork has centuries of evidence behind it. DIAM has decades. For wines intended to age for thirty or forty years, that gap matters to some winemakers. For everything under twenty years, the case for DIAM's consistency is strong.

NOMACORC synthetic cork

The NOMACORC is manufactured through a co-extrusion process that produces a dense outer skin over a porous foam core. The skin is printed with a pattern that mimics the growth lines and lenticel texture of natural cork, which is visible on the surface but has no functional significance. The CT scan shows the internal structure clearly: the highly porous core is immediately distinguishable from the denser outer layer, and the corkscrew cuts a straight, clean path through both.

The NOMACORC Select Green 500 that we scanned is rated for 3.1 mg of oxygen ingress after twelve months, then 1.7 mg annually thereafter. That precision is the product's central claim: where natural cork and even DIAM offer a range of oxygen transmission rates, the synthetic cork delivers a specified value that a winemaker can design around. There is no TCA risk, no biological variability, no vintage-to-vintage inconsistency in the stopper itself.

The limitation is that higher baseline oxygen transmission rate. Synthetic corks allow more oxygen into the bottle than natural or DIAM, which accelerates aging. For wines meant to be consumed within a few years of release, that acceleration is irrelevant or even beneficial. For wines built to develop over decades in the bottle, it is a meaningful constraint.

Three answers to one question

The three corks represent three different answers to the same question: how do you seal a wine bottle reliably? Natural cork answers with biology, accepting variability as the cost of a material that has proven itself across four hundred years of use. DIAM answers with engineering, taking natural cork's functional properties and removing the failure modes. NOMACORC answers with manufacturing precision, trading biological origin for complete control over oxygen transmission.

The CT scans make all three answers legible in a way that external inspection cannot. The lenticel network of the natural cork, the even granular structure of the DIAM, and the foam core of the synthetic are all directly visible, and the differences between them explain exactly why the wine industry spent two decades engineering alternatives to something that worked well enough for centuries but not well enough for the standards modern winemakers hold.

Citations
No items found.