Mad scientists create regenerative plastic with biological capillary system. World ending in 3,2...

Hawaiian Punch

umop-apisdn
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
19,107
Reputation
7,014
Daps
84,007
Reppin
The I in Team
post-15166-Cat-using-laptop-when-suddenly-2ZyH.gif


Did none of these eggheads watch terminator or matrix??? Combine AI systems with self healing regenerative plastics and what are you left with? Humans being farmed as batteries. :sadcam:


Regenerating plastic grows back after damage | News Bureau | University of Illinois


CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Looking at a smooth sheet of plastic in one University of Illinois laboratory, no one would guess that an impact had recently blasted a hole through it.


VIEW VIDEO
| Video by Steve Drake, Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology
Illinois researchers have developed materials that not only heal, but regenerate. Until now, self-repairing materials could only bond tiny microscopic cracks. The new regenerating materials fill in large cracks and holes by regrowing material.

Led by professor Scott White, the research team comprises professors Jeffrey S. Moore and Nancy Sottosand graduate students Brett Krull, Windy Santa Cruz and Ryan Gergely. They report their work in the May 9 issue of the journal Science.

“We have demonstrated repair of a nonliving, synthetic materials system in a way that is reminiscent of repair-by-regrowth as seen in some living systems,” said Moore, a professor of chemistry.

Such self-repair capabilities would be a boon not only for commercial
goods – imagine a mangled car bumper that repairs itself within minutes of an accident – but also for parts and products that are difficult to replace or repair, such as those used in aerospace applications.

The regenerating capabilities build on the team’s previous work in developing vascular materials. Using specially formulated fibers that disintegrate, the researchers can create materials with networks of capillaries inspired by biological circulatory systems.

“Vascular delivery lets us deliver a large volume of healing agents – which, in turn, enables restoration of large damage zones,” said Sottos, a professor of materials science and engineering. “The vascular approach also enables multiple restorations if the material is damaged more than once.”

For regenerating materials, two adjoining, parallel capillaries are filled with regenerative chemicals that flow out when damage occurs. The two liquids mix to form a gel, which spans the gap caused by damage, filling in cracks and holes. Then the gel hardens into a strong polymer, restoring the plastic’s mechanical strength.

“We have to battle a lot of extrinsic factors for regeneration, including gravity,” said study leader White, a professor of aerospace engineering. “The reactive liquids we use form a gel fairly quickly, so that as it’s released it starts to harden immediately. If it didn’t, the liquids would just pour out of the damaged area and you’d essentially bleed out. Because it forms a gel, it supports and retains the fluids. Since it’s not a structural material yet, we can continue the regrowth process by pumping more fluid into the hole.”

The team demonstrated their regenerating system on the two biggest classes of commercial plastics: thermoplastics and thermosets. The researchers can tune the chemical reactions to control the speed of the gel formation or the speed of the hardening, depending on the kind of damage. For example, a bullet impact might cause a radiating series of cracks as well as a central hole, so the gel reaction could be slowed to allow the chemicals to seep into the cracks before hardening.

The researchers envision commercial plastics and polymers with vascular networks filled with regenerative agents ready to be deployed whenever damage occurs, much like biological healing. Their previous work established ease of manufacturing, so now they are working to optimize the regenerative chemical systems for different types of materials.

“For the first time, we’ve shown that you can regenerate lost material in a structural polymer. That’s the kicker here,” White said, “Prior to this work, if you cut off a piece of material, it’s gone. Now we’ve shown that the material can actually regrow.”:sadcam:
 

tmonster

Superstar
Joined
Nov 26, 2013
Messages
17,900
Reputation
3,205
Daps
31,793
this is not as impressive as the title sounds and definitely does not have the "smart" stratification capabilities of human skin healing (minor injuries)

The discovery and manipulation the gel-lation/capillary mechanism's "kinetic control" is impressive
 
Last edited:

Type Username Here

Not a new member
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
16,368
Reputation
2,400
Daps
32,646
Reppin
humans
lol, we're tryna make terminators n shyt but we not puttin effort towards permanently kicking dirty energy. :shaq2:

Or curing AIDS, Cancer, etc

There are people putting effort into these things everyday.

I hear what you guys are saying but you guys present an unfair argument. There are different fields people work in to progress civilization. Sometimes a discovery or breakthrough in one area/field can have (good) unforeseen consequences in other areas, including energy and medicine.

People are trying to cure cancers everyday.

Woman’s cancer killed by measles virus in unprecedented trial

But there has to be trials and long periods of observation. For example, with AIDS, there has been several short-term cures but the disease comes backs after periods of time. There is also the possibility that the cure might cause something worse in the long run.
 
Top