Author Topic: NASA develops material capable of healing its own bullet wounds  (Read 531 times)

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rangerrebew

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NASA develops material capable of healing its own bullet wounds
« on: September 03, 2015, 10:31:52 am »
NASA develops material capable of healing its own bullet wounds
By Brian Booker     15 hours ago in Technology

NASA has developed a new polymer technology that is capable of healing puncture wounds, using a gel that hardens after coming into contact with oxygen.

NASA has developed a new material that can actually heal its own puncture wounds, including bullet wounds. In what might seem like a Terminator-esque development, researchers have found a way to create materials capable of self-repair. Such materials could have a wide range of uses in space exploration, military application, and industrial technologies.
The polymer material healed itself by using a gel, contained between the outer polymer layers, that would automatically be released after being punctured, and would then mix with oxygen to form a liquid that would eventually harden. The process of changing from liquid to solid state apparently takes only a matter of seconds.
The gel itself contains a gel material called tributylborane, which hardens when it comes into contact with oxygen. So if a spaceship was punctured by debris and started to leak oxygen, the tributylborane would be released and would automatically heal the puncture.
As of right now the material is only in the testing stage of development, however researchers are already touting its potential applications.
The development comes after years of NASA being in the cross-hairs for potential budget cuts. At a time when budgets are tight and public debts are piling up, many have come to question spending billions of dollars on programs like NASA. The agency, however, has long been one of the primary drivers of fundamental research, which in turn has led to numerous highly profitable industrial technologies.
Advanced technologies, like this space-age, self-healing polymer, prove that NASA still supports valuable, fundamental research.

Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/technology/nasa-develops-material-capable-of-healing-its-own-bullet-wounds/article/442724#ixzz3kfcdfXtQ

Offline EdinVA

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Re: NASA develops material capable of healing its own bullet wounds
« Reply #1 on: September 03, 2015, 12:07:59 pm »
Not sure how NASA is making this claim unless they just have a new formula.
High Impact Technology has been doing this for many years for trucks in combat zones.


www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6qHY1H6piE

Offline jmyrlefuller

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Re: NASA develops material capable of healing its own bullet wounds
« Reply #2 on: September 03, 2015, 08:57:05 pm »
Not sure how NASA is making this claim unless they just have a new formula.
High Impact Technology has been doing this for many years for trucks in combat zones.
I watch NASA TV every so often and in their collection was an educational clip about this substance while it was still in development. What makes this one different from the others, I believe, is that it is transparent. That way it can be used for space habitats to let sunlight in, for example, whereas most self-healing substances have been opaque up to this point.
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