The Star Malaysia

Japanese teacher discovers self-repairing plastic glass

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Tokyo: A Japanese researcher has developed – by accident – a new type of glass that can be repaired by simply pressing it back together after it cracked.

The discovery opens the way for super-durable glass that could triple the lifespan of everyday products like car windows, constructi­on materials, fish tanks and even toilet seats.

Yu Yanagisawa, a chemistry researcher at the University of Tokyo, made the breakthrou­gh by chance while investigat­ing adhesives that can be used on wet surfaces.

Does this mean you will soon be able to repair those cracks in your smartphone with a quick press of the fingers? Or surreptiti­ously piece together a shattered beer glass dropped after one pint too many?

Well, not quite. Not now and in fact, not in the near future.

But it does open a window of opportunit­y for researcher­s to explore ways to make more durable, lightweigh­t, glass-like items, like car windows.

In a lab demonstrat­ion, Yanagisawa broke a glass sample into two pieces.

He then held the cross sections of the two pieces together for about 30 seconds until the glass repaired itself, almost resembling its original form.

To demonstrat­e its strength, he then hung a nearly full bottle of water from the piece of glass – and it stayed intact.

The organic glass, made of a substance called polyether thioureas, is closer to acrylic than mineral glass, which is used for tableware and smartphone screens.

Other scientists have demonstrat­ed similar properties by using rubber or gel materials, but Yanagisawa was the first to demonstrat­e the self-healing concept with glass.

The secret lies in the thiourea, which uses hydrogen bonding to make the edges of the shattered glass self-adhesive, according to Yanagisawa’s study.

But what use is all this if it cannot produce a self-healing smartphone screen?

“It is not realistica­lly about fixing what is broken, more about making longer-lasting resin glass,” Yanagisawa said.

Glass products can fracture after years of use due to physical stress and fatigue.

“When a material breaks, it has already had many tiny scars that have accumulate­d to result in major destructio­n,” Yanagisawa said.

“We may be able to double or triple the lifespan of something that currently lasts for 10 or 20 years,” he added.

 ?? — AFP ?? Cracking the problem: Yanagisawa looking at a piece of repaired broken resin glass after pressing the pieces back together at the university’s lab in Tokyo.
— AFP Cracking the problem: Yanagisawa looking at a piece of repaired broken resin glass after pressing the pieces back together at the university’s lab in Tokyo.

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