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Science Technology

Self-Repairing Plastic 14

mpark6288 writes "Recently, the news has been rocked by a discovery: Self-Repairing plastics. As News Factor: Sci Tech reports: "Chemical engineers are pushing plastics to new heights with two new developments: A material called Automend can restore itself to 60 percent of its previous strength and an organic plastic with magnetic properties can be controlled by light." Of course, this has frightening ramifications, as Jay Leno puts it: Cher could live forever."
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Self-Repairing Plastic

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  • "If a product constructed with Automend cracks while in use -- such as in an electronic device that heats and cools frequently -- it would repair itself the next time it heats," said UCLA professor of organic chemistry Fred Wudl.
    I've actually thought of that before. Too bad I was too dumb to implement it.
  • Now.. what is perhaps more worrying is that some retro furniture designer could start making awful 70s plastic chairs and they may never fully die?
  • by Zarf ( 5735 ) on Friday March 22, 2002 @07:40AM (#3206479) Journal
    temperature required for Automend to heal -- between 240 degrees and 250 degrees Fahrenheit

    So it's not like the stuff magically heals itself or anything but I still want a windshield for my car made out of the stuff since it is transparent. My windshields always get cracked by rocks and gravel. Folks in cold climates will love it because they get heat and cold cracks on their windshields and with this stuff a hot clothes iron could heal it.

    I wonder how Automend would perform in Car accidents? If it shatters then you certainly don't want it for you car... cars use "saftey glass" to avoid that flesh ripping statter action.
    • I don't see why we couldn't apply a safety-glass-like backing to an Automend windshield. The outside would be repairable, while the inside would be safety-glass but you probably don't need to worry about airborne gravel on the inside of the car. The trick would be to avoid air between the two layers, or perhaps to meld them together somehow.
    • My only comment is that the repaired plastic would not be optically flat after the repair, and so after a few cracks you'd get optical distortions that would distract you when driving. Possibly another hazard in addition to the safety aspect?

  • See this [slashdot.org] article, about fibrous materials with integrated, fungible glue capsules - so that each stress which breaks fibers also breaks the glue capsules to repair those fibers.
  • Nature.com - Feb 15, 2001 [nature.com]

    Discover.com - May 2001 [discover.com]

    The only reason I bring this up is my story was rejected a year ago... *Whine* Wish I still had my original URL for that story... Nothing about magnetic properties tho...
  • Self-repairing plastic could be used in windshields, but also glasses. Scratched and broken glasses are a good application.
    A better application would be the screen on a Gameboy, Gameboy Colour, Gameboy Advance etc. They constantly get scratched, so now all you need to do is heat it and it's "healed". Sounds good.
  • I can see it now... A superintelligent computer named HAL, except now HAL can't so easily be defeated by pulling out his magneto-optical RAM.

    HAL: What are you doing, Dave?

    Dave: ... (starts trying to remove HAL's MO RAM)

    HAL: I wouldn't do that if I were you, Dave.
    (light shines from HAL's 'eye' and immediately the MO plastic is ripped back into place by a strong magnetic force. The light changes and thousands of the MO RAMS shimmer, seemingly changing their outsides to a razor like thin-ness.)

    HAL: I'm sorry Dave, but you should have remembered that your suit contains the same compnents as I do.

    (HAL starts flickering, causing Dave to be thrown against the now deadly MO RAMs)

    HAL: Goodbye, Dave.

You're using a keyboard! How quaint!

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