Kind: captions Language: en here are two metal cylinders and a single drop of superglue once it sets you can literally hang from that one drop of adhesive oh my God that is crazy so how is super glue so strong that's what I want to find out and along the way we're going to learn how it sets so quickly why it's so good at sticking to skin how it saves lives and how it might even help solve our plastic pollution problem plus if it's so strong one single drop can easily lift over 3 tons why is it weak in certain circumstances mom's going to kill us in 1942 the US was at War and to accelerate the production of gunsights the Eastman Kodak company was looking for a clear plastic that could be cast instead of grinding glass lenses chemist Harry couver was working on a compound called cyano acon it looked promising but it had the unfortunate tendency to stick to everything it touched couver called it a severe pain and as the war wound down Kodak gave up on finding a plastic replacement and kept on making gunsights out of glass by 1951 couver was again trying to develop a clear plastic this time for Jet Plane canopies if he could just solve the stickiness problem cyanoacrylate could work couver showed the material to his cooworker Fred Joiner but gave him strict instructions I told him look don't take a refractive index of this material if you do you're going to wreck the refractometer cuz it's going to stick it together but after testing 99 other compounds Joiner had forgotten so he prepped the 910th test by smearing cyanoacrylate between two prisms after taking the measurement Joiner discovered he couldn't pull the prisms apart he panicked the refractometer worth nearly $10,000 adjusted for inflation was ruined but instead of getting angry couver had a flash of insight he got a sample of cyano acrylate and began gluing together anything within reach glass plates rubber stoppers metal spatulas wood paper in all different combinations he said everything stuck to everything almost instantly and with bonds I could could not break apart with this discovery he dubbed the compound Eastman 910 adhesive as it was the 910th substance tested in the company's search but nowadays everyone calls this super glue so how does it work so quickly with such strength on so many different things bonds almost anything a plastic knob a plastic plug a rubber boot a metal Broach a fishing rod a cycle grip model planes and model trains a door knob screw a flashlight case the broken trim on superglue in the tube is a liquid of identical monomer molecules the molecule is ethyl cyanoacrylate when you put it between two surfaces the liquid flows into all the pores and crevices then the monomers start reacting with each other joining to form long polymer chains this turns the glue from a liquid into a solid and at this point it can no longer be pulled out of the cracks and crevices so it's stuck in place and the two surfaces are connected if you're ever trying to glue surfaces that are too smooth this is probably the reason superglue sticks poorly there are few crevices or pores for it to cling to to fix this you can sand the surfaces to introduce some surface texture that way when the liquid glue solidifies it's stuck in the cracks but what triggers the monomers to solidify instead of staying liquid like they are in the tube well ethyl cyanoacrylate is primed to react because it has two double bonds and one triple bond close together what makes it so reactive is you have a double bond attached to a nitri group and an ester group and the unique part about that is the chemistry of those groups make that double bond so electron deficient the oxygen and the nitrogen atoms attract electrons more than the carbons so that leaves this carbon slightly positively charged it is hungry it is looking and anything even slightly electr negative it will attack and it'll start a reaction in the presence of a negative ion the carbon double bond breaks and four single bonds form but the nitr and EST groups are so electronegative they pull the extra electron across the molecule making this carbon negative that invites another slightly positive Carbon on a separate monomer to attack and now they're chemically linked together the start of a polymer chain and once that goes now it has the ability to go react with all those other superglue hungry monomers and and rapidly pize it's it's a really really chemically reactive species that single initiator started a chain reaction the next monomer again pulls across the electron and more and more monomers bond together forming longer and longer chains until the superglue has solidified it normally takes between 10 and 30 seconds to set this was much faster than other adhesives avail able in the 1950s a lot of glues like white glue and glue sticks work by drying out so you have to wait for the water to [Music] evaporate but with Superglue it's almost the opposite while I was prototyping snatoms I 3D printed these plastic shells and superglued them together one day I was trying to open a bottle of superglue where the cap had gotten glued onto the nozzle so I tried twisting it off with my teeth but the bottle exploded filling my mouth M with superglue and I was thinking well I might have a few seconds to spit it out with the saliva in my mouth before it set but the superglue actually hardened immediately it stuck to my teeth and my tongue I had to get my now wife to pick it out of my teeth with tweezers luckily it didn't glue together anything essential I think it's because it solidified so rapidly and the reason it did that is because the polymerization of superglue is actually triggered by water specifically it's the slightly negative oxygen atoms in the polar water molecule and the negative hydroxide ions in water that often break open the carbon double bond initiating the formation of chains and water is everywhere I mean there's moisture in the air little bits of water on most surfaces or absorbed into materials like Fabrics that's why superglue sets rapidly on almost every surface each water molecule can initiate the formation of a polymer chain there's a forensic technique that uses superglue fumes to pull fingerprints from nonporous surfaces when you grab something your hand leaves behind moisture and oils that are perfect for superglue to bind with and this also makes skin ideal to stick to there are a lot of wrinkles and pores for superglue to seep into plus the protein collagen has a number of negative regions that can initiate the polymerization reaction and bond directly with am monomer so your skin is the perfect sort of surface for superglue to stick to and that's why it's so hard to get off some of your molecules literally become part of the polymer chain there's a medical case study where someone got cyanoacrylate all over his hands so he quickly went to wash it off with soap and water but that accelerated the polymerization reaction and his hands were stuck together so he went to multiple medical professionals and he got terrible advice they tried alcohol water and soap they also attempted physical separation and he went to consult cosmetic surgery but finally someone suggested acetone acetone or nail polish remover dissolved the glue and released his hands now unfortunately the bottles for some types of superg glue look incredibly similar to those for eye drops so there are hundreds of cases of people putting superglue directly into their eyes in that case acetone is not the solution don't try to separate your eyelids just seek medical attention superglue is strong to demonstrate this and promote his new product cover went on a game show he showed that with only a single drop of glue he could lift himself and the host into the air here we go on one drop of glue after 24 hours it would support something like 15,000 LB One Drop of glue now doctor you must be very proud of this I imagine many years of research went into its Discovery huh no as a matter of fact there wasn't Gary this discovery was purely by accident bully bre superglue polymers are almost all single chains running linearly between the surfaces they have a directionality to them kind of like wood grain the chains are densely packed with some cross linking between them and this makes the polymer fairly rigid and it's about as hard as a hard hat this makes it strong in compression under tension superglue is strongest when you pull in the same direction as the chains the tensile strength of superglue can be upwards of 25 megapascals which is similar to other polymers meaning a square patch just 5 cm on a side could suspend a fully grown African elephant but superglue also has its weaknesses it is brittle so if there's a Sudden Impact it just kind of falls apart as the superglue is very quickly reacting it usually produces really short polymer chains that have a matrix with built-in stress anytime you have stress in a material it it's a potential failure point the thing that makes it a really good adhesive is kind of its Achilles heel in some cases polyethylene polypropylene nylons like those squishy Plastics they their polymer chains and their chemistry are such that they can absorb a lot of impact if a Force comes they they'll kind of deform whereas in the the chains of a superglue polymer it doesn't have the ability to do that so any impact will come and it'll physically break those rigid bonds and it'll also kind of be absorbed in those stress points and it'll cause it the whole thing to fracture superglue is also weak if a force is applied perpendicular to the polymer chains that is it's weak in sheer during this Shear test the stress releases breaking the superglue Bond so Shear is kind of a combination of forces so you kind of have like a compression and like a friction going on tension is a pretty unidirectional force and like the polymer chains are able to deform enough however in sheer you have a more Dynamic set of forces going on and and they're just kind of breaking all all at once sheer force doesn't get spread even ly it's highest at the edges and lower in the middle and since superglue is so brittle it can't redistribute this stress causing the bond to fail it's even worse if you grab one end of a surface and try to peel it back in that case all that force is on a few polymers so the chains break one by one like a zipper unzipping two long bars super glued together could be strong since there's a lot of surface area but if one end breaks the rest can easily peel off off now a bond breaking is bad but there are some materials that super glue won't even stick to at all so here we have a milk bottle and this is made out of a plastic called polyethylene we're going to put one drop right here but it's so weak you can see that the glue has made a perfect little film and it doesn't stick whatsoever the materials that superglue does not bond to they they fall into a category of materials that are known as chemically inert and by inert it just means that they don't have reactive sites so superglue is so reactive because it is so electron deficient it's looking for any source of electrons but you have a polypropylene or a polyethylene or a Teflon and carbon loves carbon and carbon is not sharing its electrons so there is nothing on the surface surf that is willing to donate any reactivity even if you add initiators Say by spraying water it still doesn't work that's because these materials are hydrophobic and nonporous if you spray like a a polypropylene sheet um with water it'll just fall off right you know if you can think of like the beating up of water on a hydrophobic surface so if you pour Super Glue on top of water it'll just like you'll just get like a clump of super glue on it and then you can just peel it off most superglue specifically warns against using it on polyethylene and polypropylene because it won't stick but this is actually a good thing you have to have something that superglue won't stick to so it can be contained and stored without setting superglue quickly found industrial applications its first sale was to Mason and hangar in 1956 who used it to assemble atomic bombs soon different additives were devised to change the properties of pure ethyl cyanoacrylate the monomers by themselves are very runny almost like water so companies added thickening agents like fumed silica to turn it into a gel fumed silica forms Branch structures that increase viscosity some acid is often added to inhibit polymerization in the tube if you want to speed up the setting of superglue one way is to add more negative ions the initiators that start the polymerization reaction you can buy accelerators specifically for this purpose off the shelf but a number of diyers and handymen use baking soda sodium byc carbonate it reacts with moisture in the air to produce hydroxide ions so when you add superglue it sets even faster due to all those ion initiators plus it forms a really hard composite substance you can layer superglue and baking soda to strengthen a joint and fill gaps it can even be drilled or sanded after setting it's interesting to see how baking soda in solution speeds up the polymerization of superglue if you take pure water and pour in superglue you get a bunch of little plastic droplets the glue sets quickly but not fast enough to keep the whole stream connected but with baking soda dissolved in the water the superglue sets even faster this creates a continuous length of polymer which is really cool to see but the resulting plastic is fragile and can easily be crushed if you want to glue things underwater with superglue the key is actually to slow the polymerization down with a gel cyanoacrylate the thickeners slow the reaction giving you enough time to apply and detach objects wow there it is glued underwater it's not even a perfect fit I didn't put it together quite right but it's still stuck one day C's eldest son was making a model when he accidentally cut his finger as a quick-thinking and experimentally minded father cver got some superglue he brought home from the lab and applied it to the cut it instantly sealed shut cover immediately saw its potential in medicine and he went to work he envisioned a glue that could completely replace sutures but his team soon ran into three key problems first as superglue sets all those bonds formed forming release Heat this is a standard cotton ball just going to add some liquid superglue 86 oh my gosh it's starting to smoke 93 108 wo make my eyes water 120 if you do this at home wear goggles and probably a respirator and probably do it outside I'm feeling it now it is hot hot to the touch the cotton has a lot of surface area and it's absorbed a lot of water so the superglue sets even faster than usual and releases all its heat at once if I get it on my skin the temperature increase wouldn't be as dramatic but it's enough to irritate a wound the second problem is that over time superglue in the body breaks down and some of the things it breaks down into are toxic chemicals like f Malahide and finally superglue is hard and brittle unlike us we are mostly just squishy bags of meat and water so an adhesive for living tissue needs to be soft and flexible for the entire duration of the healing process remarkably couver and his team found that all of these problems could be solved with a single change to the molecule simply increase the number of carbons in the alkal chain with longer carbon chains it takes more time for the monomers to bind together which slows SLS down the rate of reaction this slows the rate of heat released so there's not a significant temperature increase all at once the longer polymers also break down much more slowly so the wound has enough time to heal before the glue starts releasing toxins into the body it's removed before that happens and finally since the reaction is slower there's more time for the monomers to float around and form longer polymers these longer polymers can absorb stress better than shorter chains meaning the glue can Flex more without breaking with the main problems addressed couver submitted an application to the FDA in 1964 for medical superglue the US military was very interested in cover's adhesive and they developed a medical superglue spray for use in the Vietnam War the spray saved lives in one case a bullet hit a 24-year-old Soldier passing through his kidney and liver after part of his liver was removed they gave him 12 lers of blood that's enough to replace all the blood in his body twice over but the bleeding just wouldn't stop by conventional methods he was gone but then the surgeons sprayed superglue directly on the liver the bleeding stopped Vital Signs returned to normal and the soldier recovered despite its success on the battlefield medical superglue was held up in bureaucratic red tape for years so long that couver had to abandon the in the project it wasn't until 1998 that he saw his dream of a medical glue approved a two octal cyanoacrylate called dermabond medical superglue has now grown to be a $900 million a year industry in the 74 years since coover's accidental Discovery cyano acrylate has grown to become a$3 billion industry but its impact doesn't stop there because now scientists are turning to couver original research exploring its use as a plastic and it could well solve one of the biggest problems the planet faces how to recycle the mountain of plastic we produce each year manufacturers can shred melt and reform other Plastics but the polymers degrade so the quality is worse and the process generates microplastics so you can only recycle mechanically and thermally like that a certain number of times before you get a material that's kind of useless it's still will sit in the environment and it won't break down but it's not useful but superglue is unique if you heat it up to 210° cus it'll break back down into pure monomers these can be distilled and then reactivated back into fresh polymer we have a starting material we make it into a plastic and then under a certain stimulus we can turn it back to that starting material so let's see if we can make a plastic from this you know cuz the goal of a deep polymerizable plas plastic is that it's sustainable right there are just two problems first how do you cast something that sticks to basically everything and second superglue on its own is brittle so how do you stop it from breaking the big problem is the handleability that that was kind of the original problem they found that okay this isn't a great plastic because it sticks to everything that's how they discovered that it was an excellent adhesive so we were faced with that same problem but couver didn't have the modern Plastics we have today polypropylene polyethylene and Teflon are so inert they don't activate superglue so they are the perfect materials to handle the monomers so we were able to actually handle it so that that was you know huge check we can actually work with this material next to reduce brittleness you need Superglue to form long chains that tangle together and this problem can actually be broken down into two parts first a lot of initiators means lots of short polymer chains second as the superglue sets the existing chains freeze and they can't connect together there also might be some unused monomers that can't get into the right spot to attach if you can solve both these issues you get longer chains the first fix is to use a very weak base by mixing in a little bit of this weak base there are enough initiators to start the polymerization reaction but not too many so the polymer chain end up being longer we use DMSO dimethyl Sul oxide which in no other context would be used as an initiator um but it was just electronegative enough that we were able to initiate a reaction that could go slowly and proceed in a way that produced a nice solid plastic next you need a solvent in this case acetone and and what a solvent is is it's just a media that dilutes the conditions it does not participate in the reaction usually it provides additional Mobility after mixing the glue and initiator into the acetone the mobile polymers are able to form even longer more stable chains than usual and after a while all the superglue sets the acetone evaporates and the new plastic is [Music] removed to reuse it just heat it up and distill it to get back super glue monomers so I would on average get around 93% which is excellent compared to that even the most widely recycled Plastics can't return to the same quality and they can only be downcycled once or twice before ending up in landfill I'm superg glue's biggest fan obviously but I I hope that it can actually have a real impact in terms of sustainability and kind of revolutionizing how we look at Plastics and how we look at materials that you know we've existed with for for decades you know okay what if we use this for something else cver said it took the right mindset to see cyanoacrylate as a great adhesive the first time he worked with it he was thinking about gunsights and nothing but gunsights its sticky qualities were a pain the second time he encountered it his colleagues fixated on the broken refractometer but he could finally see the quality that frustrated him as a benefit and then after Decades of researchers only viewing it as a useful adhesive it took another flash of inspiration to see its potential as a plastic once more as cver said this should serve as a reminder to all of us to be open-minded and curious enough to pursue unexplained events and unexpected results which may unlock new secrets and lead to new and exciting discoveries of the [Music] future C's ability to look Beyond roadblocks and see the breakthroughs on the other side is a skill that every great innovator shares it's not some kind of rare genius it just takes strong critical thinking and problem solving 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