[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-fka0wfY8w&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]
It would be great if you could take your car to the body shop and have it repaired in minutes, before your eyes, without anyone even laying hands on it. There have been several developments in self-healing coatings recently.
The latest innovation from a collaboration between Ohio’s Case Western Reserve University, Switzerland’s University of Fribourg, and the Army Research Laboratory in Maryland has to be one of the best yet.
While most self-healing coatings require heat to heal, all this one requires is light, and it does it fast.
The ‘optically healable supramolecular polymers’ actually disassemble when exposed to a high dose of ultraviolet light. The light causes the metallosupramolecular polymer’s molecules to become electrically excited, which generates heat, causing the non-covalently linked, low-molecular-mass polymers to become temporarily disengaged. Once disengaged from the scratched chaos, they link back into the original structure of their coordination complex.
Or, as co-author Christoph Weder, from the University of Fribourg, puts it, “Ultraviolet light is absorbed by the sticky end groups of our new supramolecular polymers, converted into heat, and the supramolecular structures disassemble into the small building blocks from which they were made.”
But what is the advantage of using light instead of heat to heal a material? Fellow researcher, Mark Burnworth, from Case Western Reserve, explains: “By using light, we have more control as it allows us to target only the defect and leave the rest of the material untouched.”
Via Inventor Spot