The Science of Watching Paint Dry
- Super Nova
- Posts: 11787
- Joined: Sat Dec 15, 2007 12:49 am
- Location: Overseas
The Science of Watching Paint Dry
In reference to a light hearted statement by a member here I thought I would share this.
It will be a riveting topic that will excite all members and guests.....
The Science of Watching Paint Dry
It turns out that watching paint dry might not be as boring as the old adage claims. A team led by Yale University researchers has come up with a new technique to study the mechanics of coatings as they dry and peel, and has discovered that the process is far from mundane.
In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the team presents a new way to image and analyze the mechanical stress that causes colloidal coatings—those in which microscopic particles of one substance are dispersed throughout another—to peel off of surfaces.
Understanding how and why coatings fail has broad applications in the physical and biological sciences, says Eric Dufresne, the John J. Lee Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Yale and lead author of the study.
"When coatings peel and crack they put the underlying material at risk," Dufresne says. "Our research is aimed at pinpointing the failure of coatings. We've developed this new technique to zoom in on coatings and watch them fail at the microscopic level."
To visualize the microscopic motion of paint in 3D, the team mixed in tiny fluorescent particles that glow when illuminated by a laser. By tracing the motion of these particles over time with a microscope, they captured the motion of the paint as it peeled and dried in detail.
In addition, the team was able to track the 3-D forces generated by the paint as it dried, producing a "stress map" of the mechanical deformation of the coating as it failed. "The trick was to apply the paint to a soft surface, made of silicone rubber, that is ever so slightly deformed by the gentle forces exerted by the drying paint," Dufresne says.
Although the current study focuses on colloidal coatings, the technique could be applied to all kinds of coatings, Dufresne said. Next, the team hopes to improve on current methods for mitigating peeling in a wide range of coatings.
"This is a completely new way of looking at a very old problem."
http://www.pfonline.com/news/the-scienc ... -paint-dry
Now doesn't this sound exciting.
It will be a riveting topic that will excite all members and guests.....
The Science of Watching Paint Dry
It turns out that watching paint dry might not be as boring as the old adage claims. A team led by Yale University researchers has come up with a new technique to study the mechanics of coatings as they dry and peel, and has discovered that the process is far from mundane.
In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the team presents a new way to image and analyze the mechanical stress that causes colloidal coatings—those in which microscopic particles of one substance are dispersed throughout another—to peel off of surfaces.
Understanding how and why coatings fail has broad applications in the physical and biological sciences, says Eric Dufresne, the John J. Lee Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Yale and lead author of the study.
"When coatings peel and crack they put the underlying material at risk," Dufresne says. "Our research is aimed at pinpointing the failure of coatings. We've developed this new technique to zoom in on coatings and watch them fail at the microscopic level."
To visualize the microscopic motion of paint in 3D, the team mixed in tiny fluorescent particles that glow when illuminated by a laser. By tracing the motion of these particles over time with a microscope, they captured the motion of the paint as it peeled and dried in detail.
In addition, the team was able to track the 3-D forces generated by the paint as it dried, producing a "stress map" of the mechanical deformation of the coating as it failed. "The trick was to apply the paint to a soft surface, made of silicone rubber, that is ever so slightly deformed by the gentle forces exerted by the drying paint," Dufresne says.
Although the current study focuses on colloidal coatings, the technique could be applied to all kinds of coatings, Dufresne said. Next, the team hopes to improve on current methods for mitigating peeling in a wide range of coatings.
"This is a completely new way of looking at a very old problem."
http://www.pfonline.com/news/the-scienc ... -paint-dry
Now doesn't this sound exciting.
Always remember what you post, send or do on the internet is not private and you are responsible.
- lisa jones
- Posts: 11228
- Joined: Tue Mar 15, 2011 10:06 pm
Re: The Science of Watching Paint Dry
Ok...... I fess. I made the comment over yonder but in all honesty, it was getting past boring here with Mellie and BO aka Loon 1 & Loon 2 co trolling with Cockroach aka Soft Cock.Super Nova wrote: In reference to a light hearted statement by a member here I thought I would share this.
It will be a riveting topic that will excite all members and guests.....
The Science of Watching Paint Dry
It turns out that watching paint dry might not be as boring as the old adage claims. A team led by Yale University researchers has come up with a new technique to study the mechanics of coatings as they dry and peel, and has discovered that the process is far from mundane.
In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the team presents a new way to image and analyze the mechanical stress that causes colloidal coatings—those in which microscopic particles of one substance are dispersed throughout another—to peel off of surfaces.
Understanding how and why coatings fail has broad applications in the physical and biological sciences, says Eric Dufresne, the John J. Lee Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Yale and lead author of the study.
"When coatings peel and crack they put the underlying material at risk," Dufresne says. "Our research is aimed at pinpointing the failure of coatings. We've developed this new technique to zoom in on coatings and watch them fail at the microscopic level."
To visualize the microscopic motion of paint in 3D, the team mixed in tiny fluorescent particles that glow when illuminated by a laser. By tracing the motion of these particles over time with a microscope, they captured the motion of the paint as it peeled and dried in detail.
In addition, the team was able to track the 3-D forces generated by the paint as it dried, producing a "stress map" of the mechanical deformation of the coating as it failed. "The trick was to apply the paint to a soft surface, made of silicone rubber, that is ever so slightly deformed by the gentle forces exerted by the drying paint," Dufresne says.
Although the current study focuses on colloidal coatings, the technique could be applied to all kinds of coatings, Dufresne said. Next, the team hopes to improve on current methods for mitigating peeling in a wide range of coatings.
"This is a completely new way of looking at a very old problem."
http://www.pfonline.com/news/the-scienc ... -paint-dry
Now doesn't this sound exciting.
None of them work or do anything offline, so one has no choice but to just leave them to fester in their online repetitive spew.
Life's too short to waste on dead shits like them ^^^^^^ <----- what my husband told me as he took my laptop, turned it off and threatened to throw it out the window lol.
Interesting topic though SN lol .
I would rather die than sell my heart and soul to an online forum Anti Christ like you Monk
- Super Nova
- Posts: 11787
- Joined: Sat Dec 15, 2007 12:49 am
- Location: Overseas
Re: The Science of Watching Paint Dry
Thanks Lisa. I thought your comment was funny and worthy of a thread.
Always remember what you post, send or do on the internet is not private and you are responsible.
- lisa jones
- Posts: 11228
- Joined: Tue Mar 15, 2011 10:06 pm
Re: The Science of Watching Paint Dry
I thought your thread was funny and worthy of a commentSuper Nova wrote:Thanks Lisa. I thought your comment was funny and worthy of a thread.
I would rather die than sell my heart and soul to an online forum Anti Christ like you Monk
- TheCult
- Posts: 48
- Joined: Wed Dec 03, 2014 1:12 am
Re: The Science of Watching Paint Dry
Get a room you two.
- Super Nova
- Posts: 11787
- Joined: Sat Dec 15, 2007 12:49 am
- Location: Overseas
Re: The Science of Watching Paint Dry
So many to choose from.TheCult wrote:Get a room you two.
Always remember what you post, send or do on the internet is not private and you are responsible.
- lisa jones
- Posts: 11228
- Joined: Tue Mar 15, 2011 10:06 pm
Re: The Science of Watching Paint Dry
Lol
I would rather die than sell my heart and soul to an online forum Anti Christ like you Monk
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