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Warmth switches on a polymer's tackiness.


Bandages gummy gummy

an old sheep that has lost all of its incisor teeth.
 enough to stay put often seem a bit too sticky when the time comes Adv. 1. when the time comes - at the appropriate time; "we'll get to this question in due course"
in due course, in due season, in due time, in good time
 to pull them off. Now, researchers in Paris have created a glue that could take the "Ouch!" out of removing an adhesive strip. In a new study, they show that a polymer can switch from sticky to not-sticky with just a slight temperature change.

The team, a joint research group of the National Center for Scientific Research and the chemical company Elf Atochem, created the new adhesive by combining two types of polymer molecules. Both have long carbon backbones with side groups poking out like the legs on a centipede centipede, common name for members of a single class, Chilopoda, of the phylum Arthropoda. Centipedes are the most familiar of the myriapodous arthropods, which consist of five groups of arthropods that had a separate origin from other arthropods. . The side groups of one molecule contain hydrogen atoms while the other's contain mostly fluorine fluorine (fl`ərēn, –rĭn), gaseous chemical element; symbol F; at. no. 9; at. wt. 18.998403; m.p. −219.6°C;; b.p. −188.14°C;; density 1.  atoms. Because fluorinated fluorinated

material to which a fluoride has been added, e.g. water for human consumption treated as a prophylaxis against tooth decay.
 polymers repel re·pel  
v. re·pelled, re·pel·ling, re·pels

v.tr.
1. To ward off or keep away; drive back: repel insects.

2.
 both oil and water, they provide the nonstick non·stick  
adj.
Permitting easy removal of adherent food particles: a frying pan with a nonstick surface.


nonstick
Adjective
 coating for cookware and the waterproofing for shoes and clothing.

At room temperature, about 25 [degrees]C, the two molecules organize themselves in neat, alternating layers to form a hard material. Raising the temperature to 35 [degrees]C melts the polymer, which can be considered a liquid crystal.

At the transition point, when the molecules lose their crystalline arrangement, the material turns from hard to sticky, says study coauthor Ludwik Leibler. He and his colleagues Guillaume de Crevoisier, Pascale Fabre, and Jean-Marc Corpart report their findings in the Aug. 20 SCIENCE.

"The change is very dramatic," Leibler says. The polymer switches to its sticky state as the temperature increases by just 2 [degrees]C. Conventional adhesives, by contrast, lose their tackiness only if they are cooled to about -40 [degrees]C.

Because the transition happens close to body temperature, "I think this has high potential for bandage-type applications," says Richard R Wool of the University of Delaware [3] The student body at the University of Delaware is largely an undergraduate population. Delaware students have a great deal of access to work and internship opportunities.  in Newark. With an adhesive derived from this polymer, "you could just cool [bandages] down and they'd pop off," he predicts.

Bandages made with this material would also be easy to reposition: Simply warming them up would renew the stickiness of the adhesive.

Leibler suggests that the polymer could also work as a coating on the grips of golf clubs or tennis rackets rackets

Game for two or four players with ball and racket on a four-walled court. Rackets is played with a hard ball in a relatively large court (approximately 9 × 18 m), unlike the related games of squash and racquetball.
. The heat from an athlete's hand would improve his or her grasp, but dust and grime would fail to stick when the equipment is not in use.

The researchers can control the temperature at which the transition occurs by either altering the ratio of polymers in the adhesive or controlling the composition and length of the side chains, says Leibler. "That's a very nice aspect of this technology," says Wool. "If it's truly switchable, this is a very interesting material."

The polymer's ability to wet a surface explains in part how it turns tacky. At the transition point, the material is no longer solid and flows into the crevices of a rough surface, making better contact. Improved contact with the surface in turn improves adhesion.

Changes on a molecular level also contribute to the stickiness. At room temperature, "the fluorine groups will fend off Verb 1. fend off - prevent the occurrence of; prevent from happening; "Let's avoid a confrontation"; "head off a confrontation"; "avert a strike"
deflect, forefend, forfend, head off, avert, stave off, ward off, avoid, debar, obviate
 the surface, and you get very low stick," says Wool. When the material heats up, however, the molecules become disordered, and "the backbone can start to play a role in making contact with the surface," he says.

The polymer could serve as "a model system to understand the nature of adhesion," Leibler suggests. He and his group are now studying how changes in the chemical composition of the polymer components affect stickiness.
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Article Details
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Author:Wu, C.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 21, 1999
Words:570
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