Friday 26 February 2016

Super Glue

Coover stumbles on a powerful adhesive

In 1942 Harry Coover (b. 1919), a chemist working for Eastman-Kodak, was seeking a way to manufacture ultra clear plastic gunsights. The group of chemicals his term were investigating, the cyanocacrylates, proved not very useful. There were very sticky, and contact with even a tiny amount of water (such as is found on virtually every surface) caused them to blind.
            It was not until several years later, when he revisited the cyanoacrylates while working on another project, that Coover realized they had stumble upon something special. The prototype glue stuck together everything they tried, without requiring any heat or pressure. the substance, marked  as "Eastman 910" in 1958, became popularly known as super glue.

"The medics used the [super  glue] spray, stopped the bleeding. . . .
And many, many lives were saved."
Harry Coover

            As well as being a powerful and useful adhesive, super glue has been put to a number of other use. During the Vietnam War it was used extensively as an emergency medical intervention. Because  it bonded skin and tissue so efficiently, it was used to seal wounds and stop bleeding quickly, without the need for time-consuming stitches.
           Crime scene investigators also use it as way of revealing fingerprints.The object to be printed is "fume" by placing a few drops of the super glue on a heater inside a sealed tank. gas produced by the heated super glue sticks to the oils left by the fingerprint,, making it visible to the naked eyes.

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