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This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Cynthia Graber. This will just take a minute.
If you get a scratch, your skin can heal itself. But if your car gets scratched, it stays scratched. Scientists at the University of Southern Mississippi think they may have solved that problem. They’ve developed a new material that can self-heal scratches when exposed to sunlight. They published this research in the March 13th edition of the journal Science.
The new technology first takes polyurethane—the coating on many cars. Then researchers added chitosan—that’s a key polymer in crab1 and shrimp2 shells. The final bit thrown into the mix are minute amounts of oxetane rings, with three atoms of carbon and one of oxygen.
The researchers are trying to mimic3 natural processes. Here’s how it works. When there’s a scratch, damaging the molecule4, the oxetane ring opens. It has two reactive ends. In sunlight, chitosan breaks into two chains and generates free radicals5. Then those chitosan chains link up with the reactive ends of the oxetane, filling in the scratch.
Researchers say this technique is much simpler and more cost-efficient than other attempts at self-healing. So maybe in the future, when your car gets scraped, it’ll be all healed up before you have to spend any of your hard earned scratch.
Thanks for the minute for Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Cynthia Graber.
1 crab | |
n.螃蟹,偏航,脾气乖戾的人,酸苹果;vi.捕蟹,偏航,发牢骚;vt.使偏航,发脾气 | |
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2 shrimp | |
n.虾,小虾;矮小的人 | |
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3 mimic | |
v.模仿,戏弄;n.模仿他人言行的人 | |
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4 molecule | |
n.分子,克分子 | |
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5 radicals | |
n.激进分子( radical的名词复数 );根基;基本原理;[数学]根数 | |
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