Derek Muller makes a claim right at the start that's hard to wrap your head around: Japanese swords "are still considered to be among the best in the world." But then he follows it up with something that sounds like it belongs in a museum catalog rather than a science video. "One from the 16th century has been appraised at $105 million," Muller writes, "making it the most expensive sword ever built." That's not a typo. That's the kind of opening that makes you lean forward and say, 'I need to hear this.'
The Iron Sand Journey
What Muller is showing here is remarkable because he's captured something most documentaries miss: the entire chain from raw material to finished blade. He filmed the team gathering iron sand directly from rivers, then smelting it overnight in a furnace that fires only one night each year using the ancient tatara method. This isn't some polished studio recreation. He's standing next to a furnace where 614 kilograms of iron sand and 720 kilograms of charcoal were added over 21 hours to produce a 100 kilogram block of steel.
The piece makes an unexpected historical argument: Japan was actually late to steel production because of its geology. "Japan with its mostly volcanic geology has barely any of these sedimentary iron oxides," Muller explains, "and this is likely why the country was late to the steel production game." The irony is striking — a country famous for its swordsmanship had to import metals from China and Korea until the 8th century. This context matters because it reframes Japanese sword making as an achievement born from scarcity rather than abundance.
The Chemistry Behind the Blade
Muller offers one of the clearest explanations of why steel beats bronze I've seen in a popular video. "Alloys are usually stronger than pure metals because they contain different sized atoms," he writes, "and this reduces the ability of atoms to slide past each other when an external force is applied." That's a concise way of saying: you can't sharpen something that bends. Bronze was discovered first precisely because it requires lower temperatures — both copper and tin melt at accessible levels. But as Muller notes, "although it can be sharpened it's too soft to hold an edge for long."
The technical explanation of quenching is where this piece really shines. He walks through how the sword gets its iconic curve not from shaping but from material science: "the tetragonal lattice structure of martensite also takes up more space so the edge of the blade expands relative to the spine curving the sword backwards." The phrase "the iconic curve of a samurai sword comes from the formation of martensite" is the kind of insight that makes this worth 15 minutes. Most people assume the curve is aesthetic or hand-forged. It's actually a byproduct of hardness treatment.
you can actually see the boundary between different types of steel in a finished sword by the difference in color this is known as hamon which literally means edge pattern
The Visible Science
The hamon — the visible line where hard meets soft metal in a finished sword — is perhaps the most visually striking claim Muller makes. At the Victoria Albert Museum, he says, there's a Japanese sword with "a very detailed little dragon" in the hamon. That detail alone suggests someone spent countless hours hand-polishing to create an image within the quenching boundary. The entire process takes a month per sword, done by hand.
The piece also addresses why one-third of all blades shatter during quenching — a failure rate that sounds terrifying until you realize it means two-thirds survive. That's actually a remarkable success rate for a material science process with no electronic assistance.
Bottom Line
Muller's strongest move is connecting the samurai sword to the cyanobacteria that first oxygenated Earth's oceans, then to banded iron formations in sedimentary rock, then to Japan's volcanic geology that forced its late entry into steel. The weakest point is probably the $105 million figure — it's dramatic but he doesn't explain what makes this particular sword so valuable beyond age and craftsmanship. Still, the core argument holds: Japanese sword making isn't just tradition for tradition's sake; it's a material solution to specific geological problems, refined over centuries until the chemistry became visible in the blade itself.