SSS 2012-03-07
时间:2012-04-16 05:48:07
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(单词翻译)
This is Scientific American 60 second Science, I am Sophie Bushwick, got a minute~
They’re called hydogels: Jell-O-like materials made of networks of long-chain
molecules1 in water. And they’re as flexible as living tissue. But hydrogels could not recover from a cut—until now. Bioengineers at U.C. San Diego have made hydrogels that are self-healing in acidic conditions.
When you cut open a piece of hydrogel, the polymers that normally entwine to hold the gel together cannot grasp each another again, leaving the wound unhealed. But in the new gels, additional
molecular2 chains
dangle3 from the primary structure. When two pieces of the cut hydrogel are pressed together in an acidic solution, the side chains of each piece
tangle4 up to weld the parts together. The work is in the
Proceedings5 of the National Academy of Sciences。
These hydrogels could seal up industrial acid
leakages6 and contribute to self-healing plastics. In the acidic environment of the stomach, they could bandage holes or deliver drugs to
ulcers7. The researchers are trying to make gels that mend at a range of pH levels. They may look like desserts, but self-healing hydrogels could be a medical main course.
Thanks for the minute for Scientific American 60 second Science. I'm Sophie Bushwick
Vocabulary:
entwine:to become twisted or twined
dangle:to hang loosely and usually so as to be able to swing freely
tangle: to unite or knit together in intricate confusion
weld:to unite (metallic parts) by heating and allowing the metals to flow together or by hammering or compressing with or without previous heating
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