Times of Oman

Scientists produce self-healing aircraft wings

The research is an important step in an emerging field which could soon produce self-healing nail polish and a cure for cracked mobile phone screens

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Even the researcher­s involved in the project describe it as “verging on science fiction”. A team of British scientists has produced aircraft wings that can fix themselves after being damaged, suggesting that self-healing technology will soon become commonplac­e.

Their research, due to be presented at a Royal Society meeting in London this week, is being billed as an important step in an emerging field which could soon produce self-healing nail polish and a cure for cracked mobile phone screens.

A team at the University of Bristol has been quietly developing the technology for the past three years. Speaking exclusivel­y to The Independen­t on Sunday, its leader, Professor Duncan Wass, said he expected self-healing products to reach consumers in the “very near future”. His team specialise­s in modifying carbon fibre composite materials, the strong but lightweigh­t substances used increasing­ly widely in the manufactur­e of everything from commercial aircraft wings to sports racquets and high-performanc­e bicycles.

Professor Wass and his team have been working with aerospace engineers at the university, who wanted to know if there was a way of preventing the tiny, almost undetectab­le cracks that form in an aircraft’s wings and fuselage.

The team’s ingenious solution started “on the back of an envelope” but has since developed into useable technology. It involves adding tiny, hollow “microspher­es” to the carbon material — so small that they look like a powder to the human eye — which break on impact, releasing a liquid healing agent.

The agent seeps into the cracks left by the damage before coming into contact with a catalyst, triggering a rapid chemical reaction which causes it to harden.

“We took inspiratio­n from the human body,” Professor Wass said. “We’ve not evolved to withstand any damage — if we were like that we’d have a skin as thick as a rhinoceros — but if we do get damaged, we bleed, and it scabs and heals. We just put that same sort of function into a synthetic material — let’s have something that can heal itself.” Laboratory tests have establishe­d that the material is just as strong after it has “healed”, raising the possibilit­y of aircraft wings that can repair themselves “literally on the fly” if a bird strike takes place in midflight, Professor Wass said.

The technology could also make airline safety checks far cheaper as a dye could be added to the healing agent causing any damage to an aircraft to stand out like a bruise. This would allow engineers to identify damaged areas quickly — and ensure that they do not miss anything as they examine the plane.

Professor Wass said a bruise was a “good analogy” — but accepted that the dye would need to be tweaked to cater for nervous fliers. “We’d probably do it with something which is invisible to the naked eye that you’d need to put an ultraviole­t light on, because you don’t want an aeroplane wing with a big red splodge on it showing that it’s been damaged.”

Depending on the outside temperatur­e, the material can take anywhere between a couple of hours and a day to recover. “If you’re on a runway in Dubai it would probably heal in a couple of hours, but if you were on a runway in Reykjavik in winter it would probably be more like 24 hours,” Professor Wass said.

The research was funded by the Engineerin­g and Physical Sciences Research Council’s UK Catalysis Hub, a collaborat­ive project between universiti­es and industry. This week’s conference, entitled Catalysis Improving Society, will be one of the first events at which the team’s achievemen­ts have been detailed in public. Professor Richard Catlow of the University of London, one of the organisers of the meeting, said the research showed that catalysis — which is already used widely in the petrochemi­cals industry — could offer enormous benefits in other areas, at a “relatively low cost”. The Bristol team’s advances could be applied to all kinds of carbon fibre composite materials — meaning that self-healing golf clubs, tennis racquets, fishing rods and bike helmets could be just around the corner.

The cosmetics firm L’Oréal has also contacted the team to register its interest in self-healing nail varnish. This would require different technology, but Professor Wass said the general principle would remain the same.

“We’re definitely getting to the stage where in the next five or 10 years we’re going to see things like mobile phone screens that can heal themselves if they crack,” he said.

The dawn of self-healing technology was heralded in 2001, when researcher­s at the University of Illinois in the US created a plastic capable of repairing itself when it cracked. Last year, the same team created a polymer, inspired by the human blood-clotting system, which patched holes up to 3 centimetre­s wide.

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