ScienceIQ.com

What Are Aerosols?

Aerosols are tiny particles suspended in the air. Most occur naturally, originating from volcanoes, dust storms, forest and grassland fires, living vegetation, and sea spray (Figure 1). Human activities, such as the burning of fossil fuels and the alteration of natural surface cover, also generate aerosols. Averaged over the globe, aerosols made by ...

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Aerosols
Biology

What Makes Those Jumping Beans Jump?

Mexican jumping beans intrigue us because we don't understand how this inanimate object could actually jump, even though we see it with our own eyes. It is the question everyone wonders when they see ... Continue reading

WhatMakesThoseJumpingBeansJump
Biology

The Strange Case Of Phineas Gage

Long before the advent of neuroscience, brain injuries have been used to deduce how the brain is organized into separate regions handling separate tasks. Consider the case of Phineas Gage, a ... Continue reading

PhineasGage
Biology

There's A Lot More To Vision Than Meets The Eye

Have you ever heard of Anton's Syndrome? It's a bizarre medical disorder involving a dramatic mismatch between sensory input and conscious awareness. Why is the syndrome bizarre? Not because the ... Continue reading

VisionMeetsTheEye
Astronomy

Big Fish

The phrase 'big fish eat little fish' may hold true when it comes to planets and stars. Perhaps as many as 100 million of the sun-like stars in our galaxy harbor close-orbiting gas giant planets like ... Continue reading

BigFish

Fire Retardant Gels

FireRetardantGelsUltra-absorbent diapers, the kind that will hold massive amounts of liquids, have been used for years, without a second thought given to the materials within them. Let's face it; those materials aren't very interesting: a bit of thin plastic sheet, some cellulose fiber, and some weird powder that combines with humongous amounts of liquid that even a pediatric urologist wouldn't look at twice. What good is it? But if one considers that 99.9% or more of that liquid is just plain water, and that it takes a lot of energy (as heat) to drive that water out again, maybe there is another use for such materials after all. Water molecules are highly polar in nature; they try to stick together like so many little magnets. It therefore takes a great deal of energy to separate them into vapor. These two observed properties - a material that absorbs a great deal of water, and the high boiling point of water - can work together to hold back the most common destructive force known: fire.

That ultra-absorbent powder material is a polymer, or type of plastic, known as polyacrylate. These polymers are derived from acrylic acid, or 2-propenoic acid, and they comprise a very large group of useful plastics, including Plexiglas, Crazy Glue, and all of the other various acrylics' that one encounters every day. In the form of a powder, certain polyacrylates absorb and trap large amounts of water - up to 1000X their weight - and form a sort of thin paste or gel. This slimy fluid can then be sprayed over things to protect them from fire. Fire produces a great deal of heat energy. Adjacent materials absorb this energy and eventually get hot enough to begin burning on their own. Thus the fire spreads. However, when the water-saturated gel is encountered, the heat energy from the fire is redirected and is consumed by first having to drive out all of the entrapped water as steam. This prevents the heat from building up to the point of combustion in the surrounding materials.

Instead, for as long as there is liquid water present in the gel, the temperature of the coated object can not exceed the boiling point of water, which is far below the combustion temperature. Only when all of the water has been driven out can the temperature of the wood and other materials begin to rise again. The delay caused by this requirement to convert liquid water to steam can be sufficient to allow the fire to burn its way past a building or even to burn out, and the gel-coated building survives the blaze almost totally unscathed. All due to 'diaper technology'.