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Self-Healing Plastic Skin

An anonymous reader writes "Scientists have developed a form of plastic skin that can heal itself when damaged. The material relies on an underlying network of vessels — similar to blood capillaries — that carry a healing agent to areas on the material's surface that sustain damage. Unlike previous self-healing systems that relied on capsules of agent buried in the polymer and which became depleted after one use, the new system can respond to damage at the same point many times over."

5 of 104 comments (clear)

  1. Burn victims by Atheose · · Score: 5, Funny

    Imagine how this could be applied to burn victims.

    Or, on a more humerous note, Michael Jackson. Though I suppose there's no cure for wierdness.

  2. Interesting concept by LordBafford · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is a very good break through. With a material like this if it can be mass produced and make correctly we could see this in homes and cars as possible replacements for windows. Saying that if something broke a window it would just fix itself automatically. I assume the military will fine plenty of uses for this too. I noted that the main use they were talking about is related to space, which is great and could potentially saw millions on our various orbiters and probes where as if they are hit by debris in space they can repair themselves and save countless man hours and material in planning a mission to fix them.

    --
    Today's Tomorrow is Yesterday's Future! --- "Where Ever You Go, There You Are" -- Diablo 1
  3. Re:One ste closer... by ozmanjusri · · Score: 5, Funny
    I can't help but wonder what adverse side effects there might be for some individuals.

    Well, individuals who don't RTFA might end up sticking this stuff to themselves instead of using it in machinery or structures.

    --
    "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
  4. Re:One ste closer... by Thrakamazog · · Score: 5, Funny

    What possible side effects could there be to being a plastic based life form? People constantly trying to recycle you?
  5. The Possibilities... by astapleton · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...are enormous.

    1) A layer of self-healing plastic inside a space suit to seal off punctures before the astronaut loses too much air.
    2) Same thing on a larger scale for boats - just make the plastic sensitive to direct contact to water.
    3) Same thing on an even larger scale for planes, especially jetliners.
    4) Same thing on the largest scale for shuttles, space stations and true spacecraft.
    5) Plastic layers inside the seams and seals of a car so that water-immersed vehicles can slow water flow into a car long enough to increase the accident victim's chances of survival without preventing them from escaping a sinking vehicle.
    6) Battlefield plastic skin bandages to protect a wound from further damage, cover and clean it, maintain pressure on the injury and encourage clotting at the wound site.

    I could go on for a while on this, these being just the accident-oriented uses...

    --
    "Courage is being afraid to do the Right Thing, and doing it anyway."