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♪
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♪
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DAVID POGUE:
What's it take to make our
modern world?
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Ah!
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(Pogue shouts)
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That's amazing!
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I'm David Pogue.
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{\an1}Join me on a high-speed chase
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{\an1}through the elements...
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and beyond.
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(explosions)
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Oh, my God!
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{\an1}As we smash our way into
the materials,
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molecules,
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and reactions...
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AMANDA CAVANAGH: It's a really cool enzyme
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{\an1}because it makes life on Earth
possible.
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POGUE: that make the places we live,
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the bodies we live in,
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{\an1}and the stuff we can't seem
to live without.
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{\an1}The only thing between me and
certain death...
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{\an1}(explosions boom,
glass shatters)
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is chemistry?
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{\an1}From killer snails...
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MANDEË HOLFORD: Just when
you think you've heard of everything,
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{\an1}nature will surprise you.
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POGUE:
and exploding glass
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{\an1}to the price a pepper-eating
Pogue pays.
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{\an1}There's got to be some easier
way to learn about molecules.
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♪
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00:01:03,838 --> 00:01:06,338
We'll dig into
the surprising way
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{\an1}different elements combine
together and blow apart.
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(explosion)
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In this hour,
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{\an1}we swing from the
molecular chains
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{\an1}and surf the atomic webs
that give some materials
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{\an7}unique abilities.
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Ow...
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{\an1}The moldable molasses
of molten glass.
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(laughing):
Come on!
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{\an1}The built-in boing of rubber.
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{\an1}The G-forces are indescribable.
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{\an1}And the menagerie
of modern plastics
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{\an8}that these days
is both a miracle...
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Oh!
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And a menace.
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{\an1}People want to do
the right thing,
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{\an1}but it's reallydifficult
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{\an1}to know exactly what to do.
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POGUE:
"Beyond the Elements:
Indestructible"...
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{\an1}right now, on "NOVA."
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♪
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♪
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{\an8}♪
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{\an8}POGUE:
Ah, the periodic table...
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{\an7}the "Who's Who" of atoms!
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{\an7}The stuff everything is made of
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{\an7}with familiar names like
hydrogen,
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{\an7}oxygen, carbon, and iron.
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{\an1}But what if every substance
were made
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{\an1}of just one kind of atom,
just one kind of element?
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(baby crying)
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{\an1}What if a human...
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{\an1}were made only of carbon?
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(baby crying)
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What if water...
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{\an1}were made only of hydrogen?
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{\an1}(terrified screams)
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00:02:58,738 --> 00:02:59,705
{\an1}(loud thud, people groaning)
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00:02:59,738 --> 00:03:02,238
{\an1}And what if salt...
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{\an1}were made only of
poisonous chlorine?
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(gas hissing)
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(groans)
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{\an7}Luckily, nearly all elements
like to stick together.
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{\an7}It's through the combination
of different elements
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{\an1}that our world exists.
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{\an1}And we've made it an even richer
place by learning to harness,
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{\an1}and even make those
combinations,
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{\an1}to create new materials that
have shaped our modern world,
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{\an1}such as rubber, or plastic...
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{\an1}materials we've come
to depend on
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{\an1}but that sometimes come
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with difficult
environmental downsides.
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♪
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{\an8}But let's start
with one of the oldest
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{\an8}and most chemically interesting.
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{\an7}Look at the buildings in any
city today
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and you'll see...
Or see through...
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{\an1}one of the signature materials
of our times:
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Glass.
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♪
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{\an1}The Corning Museum of Glass
in Corning, New York,
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{\an1}is home to an internationally
famous collection of glass,
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00:04:09,505 --> 00:04:11,905
{\an1}with examples that range
from antiquity
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{\an1}to contemporary art.
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♪
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{\an1}From the functional...
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{\an1}to the fantastic.
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♪
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{\an1}The museum also runs
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{\an1}demonstrations of glassblowing.
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{\an8}PRESENTER:
She's applying glass color
to that molten glass.
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{\an7}By holding it to the ground,
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{\an7}gravity takes hold and she gets
that beautiful ruffled edge.
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{\an8}POGUE:
Some include opportunities
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{\an7}for novices like me
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{\an7}to get into the act.
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{\an7}ERIC MEEK: We're going
to bemaking something
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{\an7}we call a Roman bottle.
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{\an8}Good, keep going,
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00:04:46,438 --> 00:04:47,805
{\an8}keep going...
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{\an8}all right, stop.
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{\an8}POGUE:
The kind of glass I'm working
with is the most common sort,
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{\an8}soda lime glass,
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{\an1}the stuff of windows, drinking
glasses, and glass bottles.
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MEEK:
Give the pipe a tap...
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(tap)
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POGUE:
Whoo-hoo!
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{\an1}I am good at this.
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Eric Meek,
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{\an1}one of the hot glass
program managers,
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{\an1}breaks down the ingredients
in soda lime glass for me.
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{\an1}So these are the raw materials
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00:05:16,438 --> 00:05:17,638
{\an1}that we use to make glass.
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00:05:17,671 --> 00:05:20,405
{\an1}The first main ingredientis silica sand.
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{\an1}You can see this is a
beautifulwhite, pure silica sand.
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00:05:23,638 --> 00:05:26,338
{\an1}This will make really
nice, clear glass for us.
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POGUE:
Silica is a network
of silicon and oxygen atoms,
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00:05:30,638 --> 00:05:33,371
{\an1}where each silicon atom
shares electrons
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00:05:33,405 --> 00:05:35,038
{\an1}with neighboring oxygens,
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00:05:35,071 --> 00:05:39,105
{\an7}in what are called
covalent bonds.
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00:05:39,138 --> 00:05:41,938
{\an7}To get this to meltat a lower temperature,
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{\an7}we add soda ash, so
that's sodium carbonate.
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{\an8}POGUE:
Sodium carbonate...
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00:05:47,671 --> 00:05:50,971
{\an7}two sodiums electrically
attracted to three oxygens
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00:05:51,005 --> 00:05:54,538
{\an7}sharing electrons
with a carbon atom.
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00:05:54,571 --> 00:05:56,271
{\an7}If we melted pure silica
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00:05:56,305 --> 00:05:58,805
{\an7}it would melt nearly at4,000 degrees.
139
00:05:58,838 --> 00:06:01,138
{\an7}If you add soda ash, it
dropsthe melting temperature
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00:06:01,171 --> 00:06:02,938
{\an7}down to around 2,000 degreesFahrenheit.
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00:06:02,971 --> 00:06:05,271
So easier for us to bring about.
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00:06:05,305 --> 00:06:06,505
Easier for usto bring about.
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00:06:06,538 --> 00:06:08,705
And then the finalingredient over here
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00:06:08,738 --> 00:06:11,605
is crushed limestone, or calcium carbonate.
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00:06:11,638 --> 00:06:13,271
{\an8}POGUE:
Like sodium carbonate...
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00:06:13,305 --> 00:06:14,347
{\an8}(billiards break
clattering sound)
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00:06:14,371 --> 00:06:16,671
{\an7}but with a calcium instead.
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00:06:16,705 --> 00:06:18,605
{\an7}Calcium carbonatewill help
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00:06:18,638 --> 00:06:21,471
{\an7}to stabilize the glassover time.
Wow!
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00:06:21,505 --> 00:06:23,471
And you just sort of
mix that up in a pot.
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00:06:23,505 --> 00:06:26,238
Yup.
And put it over
a medium flame and...
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(chuckles)It's that easy.
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You mix these together,
put it in a crucible,
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00:06:29,838 --> 00:06:32,838
melt it at about 2,000degrees
and you have glass.
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POGUE:
At high temperatures,
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{\an1}all those powdery ingredients
melt together
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{\an1}to form a viscous liquid
that cools into glass.
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{\an1}But there's more to the story.
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00:06:45,671 --> 00:06:50,371
{\an7}Most solids are crystalline,
like frozen water,
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{\an1}the ice in your glass.
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{\an1}In ice, the water molecules are
arranged in a regular pattern.
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{\an1}If we heat it to its melting
point,
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00:07:00,338 --> 00:07:02,671
{\an1}ice quickly turns to liquid,
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{\an1}with water molecules sliding
past each other.
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And then,
if we drop the temperature,
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00:07:08,638 --> 00:07:10,571
{\an1}the water refreezes
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{\an1}and the regular crystalline
structure of ice returns.
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{\an1}Silica sand, the primary
ingredient in common glass,
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00:07:19,071 --> 00:07:22,638
{\an1}typically also has a regular
crystalline structure.
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{\an1}As you heat it up, it too will
melt just like ice does,
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{\an1}more or less all at once
transitioning
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{\an1}from a solid to a liquid,
with the network of silicon
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{\an1}and oxygen atoms sliding
around chaotically.
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{\an1}But this is where glass
gets weird.
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00:07:41,871 --> 00:07:44,071
{\an1}When you cool our liquid silica
down,
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{\an1}it doesn't find its way back
into a crystalline structure.
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{\an1}Instead, it becomes an
increasingly viscous liquid
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{\an1}with jumbled rings of atoms.
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00:07:54,638 --> 00:07:57,005
{\an1}When it finally cools down
enough,
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00:07:57,038 --> 00:08:00,905
{\an1}that warped irregular structure
becomes locked in place
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00:08:00,938 --> 00:08:05,438
{\an1}into what's called
an amorphous solid.
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{\an1}The range of temperatures in
which glass remains
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{\an1}a viscous, goopy liquid
that we can manipulate
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is one reasonit's such
an important material,
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00:08:15,438 --> 00:08:20,571
{\an1}and has made possible the
amazing art of glassblowing.
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00:08:20,605 --> 00:08:23,238
{\an1}When most of us talk about
glass,
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{\an1}we mean silica-based glass,
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00:08:25,671 --> 00:08:27,638
ordinary glass.
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00:08:27,671 --> 00:08:31,571
{\an1}But glass is also the term
scientists use
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{\an1}for any material that exists as
an amorphous solid,
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materials that,
unlike a crystal,
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00:08:38,905 --> 00:08:40,771
{\an1}have an irregular structure,
193
00:08:40,805 --> 00:08:42,405
and when heated
pass through a phase
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00:08:42,438 --> 00:08:46,838
{\an1}that's not exactly liquid
and not exactly solid.
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{\an1}A phase I call... gooey.
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{\an1}So glasscomes in many forms.
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POGUE:
Eric Goldschmidt,
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00:08:55,505 --> 00:08:57,138
a flame worker,
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00:08:57,171 --> 00:09:00,338
demonstrates that glass doesn't
have to be, well, glass,
200
00:09:00,371 --> 00:09:02,471
{\an1}using a piece of hard candy.
201
00:09:02,505 --> 00:09:05,971
{\an1}And it actually actsa lot like glass
202
00:09:06,005 --> 00:09:09,171
{\an1}that we use out of ourfurnaces here.
203
00:09:09,205 --> 00:09:11,205
{\an1}So I'm softening
thismaterial with some heat,
204
00:09:11,238 --> 00:09:13,305
{\an1}getting those atomsmoving around,
205
00:09:13,338 --> 00:09:16,071
{\an1}and it simply will
neverhave the opportunity
206
00:09:16,105 --> 00:09:18,271
to come back to
a crystalline network.
207
00:09:18,305 --> 00:09:19,871
{\an1}So we can soften it
a little bit.
208
00:09:19,905 --> 00:09:22,005
{\an1}Start to inflate it.
209
00:09:22,038 --> 00:09:23,638
Start to inflate it?
210
00:09:23,671 --> 00:09:26,938
(laughs)
211
00:09:26,971 --> 00:09:28,405
Come on!
212
00:09:28,438 --> 00:09:33,338
{\an1}Dude, you're making a Roman
bottle out of a Jolly Rancher!
213
00:09:33,371 --> 00:09:36,471
{\an1}In theory, it can be
shapedinto just about anything
214
00:09:36,505 --> 00:09:39,138
{\an1}because of its abilityto sort of transition
215
00:09:39,171 --> 00:09:41,538
{\an1}from really fluid to fairly,
216
00:09:41,571 --> 00:09:42,738
{\an1}fairly rigid.
217
00:09:42,771 --> 00:09:44,505
Would this still taste
like candy?
218
00:09:44,538 --> 00:09:45,671
I don't think
219
00:09:45,705 --> 00:09:47,081
we've cookedthe sweetness out of it.
(laughs)
220
00:09:47,105 --> 00:09:48,171
Is it too hot?
221
00:09:48,205 --> 00:09:49,381
It should be cool enoughto touch.
(laughs)
222
00:09:49,405 --> 00:09:50,538
Excuse me.
223
00:09:50,571 --> 00:09:53,905
My gosh, I feel like
I'm eating the wrapper.
224
00:09:53,938 --> 00:09:56,138
♪
225
00:09:56,171 --> 00:09:59,638
I've never had candy that light
and flaky.
226
00:09:59,671 --> 00:10:01,438
And I don't think I'veever had anybody
227
00:10:01,471 --> 00:10:04,638
eat a piece of glassthat
I've inflated either. (laughs)
228
00:10:06,638 --> 00:10:07,938
POGUE: This is gorgeous.
229
00:10:07,971 --> 00:10:09,447
This is, this is clearly
goingto be worth something.
230
00:10:09,471 --> 00:10:10,471
MEEK:
Straight out.
231
00:10:10,505 --> 00:10:11,638
Okay.
Yup, there you go.
232
00:10:11,671 --> 00:10:13,838
Maybe if I stop talkingand kept working.
233
00:10:13,871 --> 00:10:17,305
{\an1}There's an underappreciated
aspect of glassblowing
234
00:10:17,338 --> 00:10:20,005
{\an1}that I learned about firsthand.
235
00:10:20,038 --> 00:10:21,971
{\an1}Oh ho!
There we go,
comes right off.
236
00:10:22,005 --> 00:10:24,838
POGUE: After you shape a piece of glass
while it's hot,
237
00:10:24,871 --> 00:10:26,405
{\an1}it has to cool slowly,
238
00:10:26,438 --> 00:10:29,505
{\an1}in an annealing oven
239
00:10:29,538 --> 00:10:32,071
{\an1}that gradually ramps
down the temperature.
240
00:10:32,105 --> 00:10:36,071
{\an1}For something this size,
it takes about 12 hours.
241
00:10:36,105 --> 00:10:37,414
{\an7}Otherwise differences
in thickness
242
00:10:37,438 --> 00:10:39,405
{\an7}mean differences in cooling,
243
00:10:39,438 --> 00:10:41,405
{\an7}leading to stresses...
(glass breaking)
244
00:10:41,438 --> 00:10:44,805
{\an7}That can cause the piece
to crack.
245
00:10:44,838 --> 00:10:49,371
{\an1}But what happens if you cool
some glass really fast?
246
00:10:49,405 --> 00:10:54,805
♪
247
00:10:54,838 --> 00:10:58,005
{\an7}Then, you get these:
Prince Rupert's drops,
248
00:10:58,038 --> 00:11:00,705
{\an7}named for Prince Rupert
of the Rhine,
249
00:11:00,738 --> 00:11:06,471
{\an7}who brought them to England
in1660 as a scientific curiosity.
250
00:11:06,505 --> 00:11:08,005
MEEK:
So I'm going to have you
251
00:11:08,038 --> 00:11:10,538
take this hammerand try to break this drop.
252
00:11:10,571 --> 00:11:13,038
Are you nuts, it's glass?
253
00:11:13,071 --> 00:11:15,905
All right, so just grab
itdown here by the tail,
254
00:11:15,938 --> 00:11:18,438
All right, and set it
downthere on the table,
255
00:11:18,471 --> 00:11:20,338
and just make sure you hit,
256
00:11:20,371 --> 00:11:22,538
hit the thick end.
Just shatter it?
257
00:11:22,571 --> 00:11:24,971
{\an8}Yup.
258
00:11:25,005 --> 00:11:26,438
(clanging)
259
00:11:26,471 --> 00:11:28,571
Come on.(Meek chuckling)
260
00:11:28,605 --> 00:11:30,938
No!
261
00:11:30,971 --> 00:11:32,971
(hammering)
262
00:11:34,438 --> 00:11:38,071
{\an1}Wow... I broke your table.
263
00:11:38,105 --> 00:11:39,538
That's insane.
264
00:11:39,571 --> 00:11:42,205
{\an1}We've established that this
glass is indestructible.
265
00:11:42,238 --> 00:11:43,405
{\an1}Congratulations.
266
00:11:43,438 --> 00:11:45,905
{\an1}We have, but there is
an Achilles' heel.
267
00:11:45,938 --> 00:11:47,671
{\an1}There is a way to break this.
268
00:11:47,705 --> 00:11:51,705
POGUE:
Considering this glass
just dented a steel table,
269
00:11:51,738 --> 00:11:53,038
{\an1}I'm... skeptical.
270
00:11:53,071 --> 00:11:55,038
MEEK:
So snap it down
in the tail.
271
00:11:55,071 --> 00:11:57,138
This is me,
272
00:11:57,171 --> 00:11:58,305
trying to snapoff the tail
273
00:11:58,338 --> 00:11:59,771
of thisunbreakable glass.
274
00:12:01,305 --> 00:12:02,538
(glass breaking)
275
00:12:02,571 --> 00:12:04,805
{\an1}(explosion echoes)
276
00:12:04,838 --> 00:12:07,671
♪
277
00:12:07,705 --> 00:12:08,838
What?
(Meek chuckling)
278
00:12:08,871 --> 00:12:10,471
Where'd it go?
279
00:12:10,505 --> 00:12:12,271
It's, it's gone!
280
00:12:12,305 --> 00:12:14,038
{\an1}What just happened?
281
00:12:14,071 --> 00:12:16,871
{\an1}Well, let's rewind a little...
282
00:12:16,905 --> 00:12:19,438
(rewind sound)
283
00:12:20,071 --> 00:12:21,638
{\an1}...to the key moment.
284
00:12:21,671 --> 00:12:25,871
{\an1}When the drop of hot glass
enters the cold water...
285
00:12:25,905 --> 00:12:28,005
{\an1}(molten glass bubbling)
286
00:12:28,038 --> 00:12:31,371
{\an7}the outside of the glass
immediately cools
287
00:12:31,405 --> 00:12:32,971
{\an7}and locks into shape,
288
00:12:33,005 --> 00:12:38,471
{\an7}but the inside cools more
slowly, gradually contracting,
289
00:12:38,505 --> 00:12:42,038
{\an7}trying to pull in the rigid
outside glass,
290
00:12:42,071 --> 00:12:44,538
{\an7}creating a tremendous amount
of stress,
291
00:12:44,571 --> 00:12:47,438
{\an7}placing the outer layer
under compression.
292
00:12:48,771 --> 00:12:50,438
{\an7}MEEK: A lot of materialsunder compression
293
00:12:50,471 --> 00:12:52,505
are very strong,
including glass.
294
00:12:52,538 --> 00:12:57,205
{\an8}POGUE:
So strong, you can't break it
with a hammer.
295
00:12:57,238 --> 00:12:58,471
♪
296
00:12:58,505 --> 00:13:01,338
But there's an Achilles... tail.
297
00:13:01,371 --> 00:13:03,838
{\an1}Because that part is so thin,
298
00:13:03,871 --> 00:13:07,938
{\an1}when it enters the water, it
cools just about all at once.
299
00:13:07,971 --> 00:13:12,538
{\an7}No compression effect,
no super-strength,
300
00:13:12,571 --> 00:13:14,905
{\an7}I can break it with my hands.
301
00:13:14,938 --> 00:13:16,005
(glass shatters)
302
00:13:16,038 --> 00:13:18,971
{\an7}And that surface fracture
races through
303
00:13:19,005 --> 00:13:21,471
{\an8}the rest of the
compressed material.
304
00:13:21,505 --> 00:13:23,171
{\an8}MEEK:
Once that compressive layer
305
00:13:23,205 --> 00:13:25,871
is compromised, there's
so much energy in there,
306
00:13:25,905 --> 00:13:27,871
the whole thing will crack.
307
00:13:27,905 --> 00:13:29,105
(glass shatters)
308
00:13:29,138 --> 00:13:30,471
POGUE:
Ka-blammo!
309
00:13:30,505 --> 00:13:33,338
{\an1}Total drop destruction!
310
00:13:33,371 --> 00:13:35,538
Turns out,
the surprising strength
311
00:13:35,571 --> 00:13:36,938
{\an1}of a Prince Rupert's drop
312
00:13:36,971 --> 00:13:41,371
{\an1}plays a role in how we make
glass today.
313
00:13:41,405 --> 00:13:43,438
{\an1}Manufacturers take advantage
314
00:13:43,471 --> 00:13:45,605
of the strength
of glass under compression,
315
00:13:45,638 --> 00:13:50,038
{\an1}to make a special kind
called tempered glass.
316
00:13:50,071 --> 00:13:52,971
{\an1}So this is a piece of commercial
tempered glass,
317
00:13:53,005 --> 00:13:54,671
{\an1}and rather than being cooled
318
00:13:54,705 --> 00:13:56,205
{\an1}with water, this one is just cooled
319
00:13:56,238 --> 00:13:57,571
{\an1}with jets of airon the surface.
320
00:13:57,605 --> 00:14:01,505
{\an1}The jets of air sort of make
the skin of the glass rigid,
321
00:14:01,538 --> 00:14:03,805
and stiffens
the surface of the glass.
322
00:14:03,838 --> 00:14:05,538
{\an1}The core of this cross-section
323
00:14:05,571 --> 00:14:07,081
{\an1}is left to cool a little bit
more slowly,
324
00:14:07,105 --> 00:14:08,805
{\an1}and so it pulls away from the
surface
325
00:14:08,838 --> 00:14:10,814
{\an1}and that creates a compressive
layer on the surface.
326
00:14:10,838 --> 00:14:13,171
POGUE:
So it's sort of
compressing itself
327
00:14:13,205 --> 00:14:14,171
from the inside?
328
00:14:14,205 --> 00:14:15,571
From the inside, exactly.
329
00:14:15,605 --> 00:14:19,538
{\an7}So then, what is this, like
Prince Rupert's sidewalk?
330
00:14:19,571 --> 00:14:22,838
{\an7}It may seem counterintuitive...
331
00:14:22,871 --> 00:14:26,238
{\an7}Every cell in my body is saying
this is a bad idea.
332
00:14:26,271 --> 00:14:29,471
{\an7}But by cooling the glass to
create compressive stress,
333
00:14:29,505 --> 00:14:32,271
{\an7}generally more than 10,000
pounds per square inch,
334
00:14:32,305 --> 00:14:36,438
{\an7}it becomes physically stronger...
I can walk...
335
00:14:36,471 --> 00:14:38,638
(groans warily)
336
00:14:38,671 --> 00:14:41,805
Even jump on this tempered
piecethat's about a half-inch thick.
337
00:14:41,838 --> 00:14:43,671
Oh, my gosh!(Meek chuckles)
338
00:14:43,705 --> 00:14:45,638
(shouts)(Meek laughs)
339
00:14:45,671 --> 00:14:47,738
(laughing):
What?
340
00:14:47,771 --> 00:14:50,038
{\an1}They could make diving boards
out of this stuff.
341
00:14:52,005 --> 00:14:53,971
{\an8}(laughing):
Oh man!
342
00:14:54,005 --> 00:14:58,138
♪
343
00:14:58,171 --> 00:15:00,438
Even pouring molten glass on it
344
00:15:00,471 --> 00:15:03,971
{\an1}doesn't make it shatter
immediately,
345
00:15:04,005 --> 00:15:06,405
{\an1}but give it a minute...
346
00:15:06,438 --> 00:15:08,538
{\an8}That's some
strong glass. It is.
347
00:15:08,571 --> 00:15:11,605
{\an8}POGUE:
Or four...
348
00:15:14,705 --> 00:15:16,905
{\an8}(glass shatters)
349
00:15:20,271 --> 00:15:21,571
{\an8}POGUE:
Oh man, that was cool!
350
00:15:21,605 --> 00:15:23,271
{\an1}It was like poof!
351
00:15:23,305 --> 00:15:27,238
{\an7}The molten glass finally
compromised the surface.
352
00:15:27,271 --> 00:15:30,638
{\an1}(glass shattering)
And all that built-in stress
353
00:15:30,671 --> 00:15:32,405
{\an1}broke up the entire sheet.
354
00:15:32,438 --> 00:15:34,471
{\an1}(glass shattering)
355
00:15:34,505 --> 00:15:38,005
{\an1}But the remaining shards
are relatively safe.
356
00:15:38,038 --> 00:15:39,771
MEEK:
Because of that tension,
357
00:15:39,805 --> 00:15:40,705
when it does break,
358
00:15:40,738 --> 00:15:42,171
it breaks all the way out
359
00:15:42,205 --> 00:15:43,847
{\an1}to the very edge and it all
breaks into these little bits.
360
00:15:43,871 --> 00:15:45,371
They make these
nice little cubes
361
00:15:45,405 --> 00:15:48,538
that aren't nearly as dangerousas
a big, broken shard of glass.
362
00:15:52,305 --> 00:15:54,305
POGUE:
The miracle of glass
363
00:15:54,338 --> 00:15:58,171
{\an7}is made possible in part
by the element silicon,
364
00:15:58,205 --> 00:16:01,205
{\an7}the second most-common element
in the earth's crust
365
00:16:01,238 --> 00:16:02,671
{\an8}after oxygen.
366
00:16:02,705 --> 00:16:08,171
{\an8}Silicon atoms have 14 electrons
arranged in three shells.
367
00:16:08,205 --> 00:16:11,405
{\an8}Because the outermost shell has
four electrons,
368
00:16:11,438 --> 00:16:15,205
{\an8}silicon can share those to form
up to four bonds
369
00:16:15,238 --> 00:16:17,205
{\an7}with other atoms.
370
00:16:17,238 --> 00:16:19,371
{\an7}But one thing that it doesn't
do well
371
00:16:19,405 --> 00:16:22,738
{\an7}is form a chain with other
silicon atoms,
372
00:16:22,771 --> 00:16:26,105
{\an7}to create a compound
with a silicon backbone.
373
00:16:26,138 --> 00:16:28,371
{\an7}It's just too reactive.
374
00:16:28,405 --> 00:16:31,971
{\an8}In water, the backbone easily falls apart.
375
00:16:34,005 --> 00:16:36,338
{\an7}The element with the best
ability to do that
376
00:16:36,371 --> 00:16:38,571
{\an7}sits just above silicon.
377
00:16:39,771 --> 00:16:43,171
{\an7}Carbon can also form up to four
bonds with other atoms
378
00:16:43,205 --> 00:16:45,938
{\an8}but luckily,
it can also form strong bonds
379
00:16:45,971 --> 00:16:48,038
{\an7}with other carbon atoms.
380
00:16:48,071 --> 00:16:52,671
{\an7}The result is not only you and
me, and all life on Earth,
381
00:16:52,705 --> 00:16:56,071
{\an7}but also a plethora of other
molecules and materials
382
00:16:56,105 --> 00:16:57,305
{\an7}that shape our lives
383
00:16:57,338 --> 00:17:00,871
{\an7}and can even put a bounce
in your step.
384
00:17:00,905 --> 00:17:02,538
First up?
385
00:17:02,571 --> 00:17:03,605
Rubber!
386
00:17:03,638 --> 00:17:05,071
(engine running)
387
00:17:05,105 --> 00:17:07,571
It turns out that more than half
of the world's rubber
388
00:17:07,605 --> 00:17:10,771
{\an1}ends up wrapped around
the wheels of vehicles...
389
00:17:10,805 --> 00:17:13,871
{\an1}motorcycles, trucks, and cars.
390
00:17:13,905 --> 00:17:15,205
♪
391
00:17:15,238 --> 00:17:18,838
{\an1}So I've come to a place that's
rolling in it...
392
00:17:18,871 --> 00:17:21,505
{\an1}(race car engines roar)
393
00:17:21,538 --> 00:17:24,338
{\an1}The Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
394
00:17:26,271 --> 00:17:27,305
{\an1}It's 11 days away
395
00:17:27,338 --> 00:17:29,005
{\an1}from the running of one of the
most
396
00:17:29,038 --> 00:17:30,805
{\an1}famous car races in the world,
397
00:17:30,838 --> 00:17:33,838
the Indy 500.
398
00:17:33,871 --> 00:17:37,005
{\an1}The competing teams are here,
doing practice runs.
399
00:17:42,838 --> 00:17:45,771
{\an1}And some end better than others.
400
00:17:45,805 --> 00:17:48,471
{\an1}(car skids and crashes)
401
00:17:50,238 --> 00:17:53,571
{\an1}Before the teams hit the track,
402
00:17:53,605 --> 00:17:56,271
{\an1}some fortunate fans get a taste
of the race.
403
00:17:56,305 --> 00:18:00,938
They get to ride in a specially
adapted two-seater Indy Car...
404
00:18:00,971 --> 00:18:06,638
{\an1}At the wheel, the legendary
champion, Mario Andretti.
405
00:18:06,671 --> 00:18:08,205
{\an1}He's one of the most successful
406
00:18:08,238 --> 00:18:12,105
{\an1}American drivers in the history
of the sport.
407
00:18:12,138 --> 00:18:13,105
{\an1}He's the only pro ever
408
00:18:13,138 --> 00:18:15,671
{\an1}to win the Indianapolis 500,
409
00:18:15,705 --> 00:18:20,871
{\an1}the Daytona 500, and the Formula
One World Championship.
410
00:18:22,405 --> 00:18:27,005
♪
411
00:18:27,038 --> 00:18:30,005
{\an1}And now, it's my turn...
412
00:18:30,038 --> 00:18:37,005
♪
413
00:18:37,038 --> 00:18:38,905
Imagine riding
a roller coaster...
414
00:18:38,938 --> 00:18:42,071
{\an1}at over 180 miles an hour,
415
00:18:42,105 --> 00:18:43,505
with no rails...
416
00:18:43,538 --> 00:18:46,671
{\an1}flying around the curves,
while wondering
417
00:18:46,705 --> 00:18:48,971
why we're not
smashing into the wall.
418
00:18:49,005 --> 00:18:52,405
♪
419
00:18:52,438 --> 00:18:53,881
{\an1}I've had enough after
a couple of laps.
420
00:18:53,905 --> 00:18:58,938
{\an1}How do these drivers
do 200 of 'em?
421
00:18:58,971 --> 00:19:02,771
♪
422
00:19:08,805 --> 00:19:12,805
{\an1}Oh man, the G forces
are just indescribable.
423
00:19:12,838 --> 00:19:15,438
{\an1}I mean you're pressed against
the side
424
00:19:15,471 --> 00:19:17,805
and then pressed
against the back.
425
00:19:17,838 --> 00:19:19,938
{\an1}And when he takes the curves,
426
00:19:19,971 --> 00:19:24,071
{\an1}I mean there's a concrete wall
coming at you, just...
427
00:19:24,105 --> 00:19:25,638
(engine revs)
♪
428
00:19:25,671 --> 00:19:29,171
So what's the secret ingredient
to staying alive out there?
429
00:19:29,205 --> 00:19:30,538
To find out,
430
00:19:30,571 --> 00:19:33,238
{\an1}I head to the garage that
supplies the tires
431
00:19:33,271 --> 00:19:35,938
{\an1}in the weeks leading up
to the Indy 500.
432
00:19:35,971 --> 00:19:37,338
{\an1}(compressed air hissing)
433
00:19:37,371 --> 00:19:39,405
{\an1}In 2019, each team received
434
00:19:39,438 --> 00:19:40,805
36 sets of tires
435
00:19:40,838 --> 00:19:48,005
{\an1}for practice, qualifying, and
the race... 6,000 tires in all.
436
00:19:48,038 --> 00:19:50,138
{\an1}It's also a chance to talk
437
00:19:50,171 --> 00:19:52,138
{\an1}to the expert himself.
438
00:19:52,171 --> 00:19:54,271
{\an1}What I was surprised at most was
439
00:19:54,305 --> 00:19:57,305
{\an1}the lateral forces obviously,
as a layman.
440
00:19:57,338 --> 00:20:00,405
So is it, is it
the rubber that's keeping us
441
00:20:00,438 --> 00:20:02,038
from flying into that wall?
442
00:20:02,071 --> 00:20:03,605
{\an7}That it-that's what it is.
443
00:20:03,638 --> 00:20:05,505
{\an7}That's, the tires are obviously
444
00:20:05,538 --> 00:20:08,238
{\an7}the most important aspect
of the race car.
445
00:20:08,271 --> 00:20:12,071
{\an7}These are the babiesyou
want to kiss after a run. (laughs)
446
00:20:12,105 --> 00:20:17,371
POGUE:
At speeds up to 230 miles
an hour, a driver experiences
447
00:20:17,405 --> 00:20:20,671
{\an1}about 5Gs of force
during the turns.
448
00:20:20,705 --> 00:20:22,771
{\an1}That's more than what an
astronaut experiences
449
00:20:22,805 --> 00:20:25,405
{\an1}during a space launch.
450
00:20:25,438 --> 00:20:27,405
{\an1}So you know the tires
take a beating.
451
00:20:27,438 --> 00:20:28,705
{\an1}Do you know enough about
452
00:20:28,738 --> 00:20:31,871
the chemistry to know
what kinds of things
453
00:20:31,905 --> 00:20:33,271
they can do to the compounds?
454
00:20:33,305 --> 00:20:36,905
{\an1}Like what sorts of things
do they add?
455
00:20:36,938 --> 00:20:39,538
{\an1}If they would tell me that,
they would have to kill me.
456
00:20:39,571 --> 00:20:41,571
(laughs)
457
00:20:41,605 --> 00:20:45,005
Hopefully,
that's not a blanket policy
458
00:20:45,038 --> 00:20:50,005
{\an1}because I've come to Akron,
Ohio, looking for some answers.
459
00:20:50,038 --> 00:20:52,938
{\an1}Harvey Firestone founded
the Firestone Tire
460
00:20:52,971 --> 00:20:56,305
{\an1}and Rubber company here in 1900.
461
00:20:56,338 --> 00:21:00,205
{\an1}Bridgestone Corporation
bought it in 1988,
462
00:21:00,238 --> 00:21:03,338
{\an1}becoming Bridgestone/Firestone.
463
00:21:03,371 --> 00:21:06,271
{\an1}This is one of its research
facilities.
464
00:21:06,305 --> 00:21:09,905
And Laura Kocsis
is one of its scientists.
465
00:21:09,938 --> 00:21:14,005
{\an1}According to her,
it all starts with this.
466
00:21:14,038 --> 00:21:15,505
{\an1}I got to say, this feels rubbery.
467
00:21:15,538 --> 00:21:19,371
{\an1}And it... oh, man,
it's also stinky!
468
00:21:19,405 --> 00:21:20,971
{\an1}Yup, so that's natural rubber.
469
00:21:21,005 --> 00:21:22,938
{\an1}Oh, this is what comesout of the tree?
470
00:21:22,971 --> 00:21:24,681
Yup, so it comes out
of the tree, we process it,
471
00:21:24,705 --> 00:21:26,647
{\an1}and it turns it into what you
have in your hands right now.
472
00:21:26,671 --> 00:21:29,705
{\an1}It becomes this.
Yes.
473
00:21:29,738 --> 00:21:31,205
♪
474
00:21:31,238 --> 00:21:32,405
{\an1}Natural rubber begins
475
00:21:32,438 --> 00:21:36,305
{\an7}as sticky, runny,
white liquid called latex.
476
00:21:36,338 --> 00:21:41,605
{\an1}It's found in more than 2,000
plants, including dandelions,
477
00:21:41,638 --> 00:21:43,938
{\an1}but most of the world's
natural rubber
478
00:21:43,971 --> 00:21:47,305
{\an1}comes from trees like these,
479
00:21:47,338 --> 00:21:51,405
{\an1}the Hevea brasiliensis, better
known as the rubber tree.
480
00:21:51,438 --> 00:21:55,571
{\an1}Natural latex is about 55% water
481
00:21:55,605 --> 00:21:58,038
with particles
of rubber suspended in it.
482
00:21:58,071 --> 00:22:01,471
{\an1}And if you could zoom into one
of the particles...
483
00:22:01,505 --> 00:22:04,938
{\an1}you'd see it's like
a tangled bunch of spaghetti.
484
00:22:04,971 --> 00:22:10,438
{\an1}Each noodle is a long molecular
chain called a polymer.
485
00:22:10,471 --> 00:22:12,338
{\an7}To get to a polymer,
you start with monomers,
486
00:22:12,371 --> 00:22:14,605
{\an7}which is one chemical unit,
and that's represented by
487
00:22:14,638 --> 00:22:15,871
{\an7}these paperclips here.
488
00:22:15,905 --> 00:22:17,771
{\an7}This here isone chemical unit?
489
00:22:17,805 --> 00:22:19,405
Yup, consider that
one chemical unit.
490
00:22:19,438 --> 00:22:21,138
Meaning what... a molecule?
491
00:22:21,171 --> 00:22:22,471
Yup, one molecule.
492
00:22:22,505 --> 00:22:23,971
So for natural rubber, what,
493
00:22:24,005 --> 00:22:25,571
what molecule
are we talking about?
494
00:22:25,605 --> 00:22:27,005
So we're talking about isoprene.
495
00:22:27,038 --> 00:22:28,538
Isoprene, okay.
Yes.
496
00:22:28,571 --> 00:22:31,671
{\an3}Here's what isoprene looks like:
497
00:22:31,705 --> 00:22:35,505
{\an1}it's a molecule with five
carbons bonded to each other
498
00:22:35,538 --> 00:22:37,805
{\an1}and to eight hydrogens.
499
00:22:37,838 --> 00:22:41,505
{\an1}In natural rubber,
isoprenes are bonded together,
500
00:22:41,538 --> 00:22:45,138
{\an1}one after another,
to make a chain... a polymer...
501
00:22:45,171 --> 00:22:49,805
{\an1}just like the chain of paper
clips Laura showed me.
502
00:22:49,838 --> 00:22:51,381
Once you get to tens of
thousands of these units
503
00:22:51,405 --> 00:22:53,371
linked together,
you end up with natural rubber.
504
00:22:53,405 --> 00:22:54,938
Oh, tens of thousands?
Yup.
505
00:22:54,971 --> 00:22:55,971
{\an3}Okay.
Tens of thousands.
506
00:22:56,005 --> 00:22:59,038
POGUE:
In their natural state,
507
00:22:59,071 --> 00:23:02,305
{\an1}the rubber polymer chains can
become easily entangled
508
00:23:02,338 --> 00:23:04,238
as they coil up.
509
00:23:04,271 --> 00:23:06,105
{\an1}But when you stretch them out,
510
00:23:06,138 --> 00:23:08,038
{\an1}the chains straighten out
511
00:23:08,071 --> 00:23:11,438
{\an1}and align themselves in the
direction of the stretch.
512
00:23:11,471 --> 00:23:12,838
Let them go,
513
00:23:12,871 --> 00:23:16,671
{\an1}and the molecules return back
to their coiled-up states,
514
00:23:16,705 --> 00:23:19,271
{\an1}giving rubber its signature
515
00:23:19,305 --> 00:23:21,071
"boinginess."
516
00:23:21,105 --> 00:23:23,371
So if it's rubber, it
should be a little boingy.
517
00:23:23,405 --> 00:23:24,571
Yup, it's going to bounce.
518
00:23:24,605 --> 00:23:26,071
Ah! Okay, that's,
519
00:23:26,105 --> 00:23:27,571
that's very boingy.
520
00:23:27,605 --> 00:23:28,971
{\an1}I'm sure here at Bridgestone,
521
00:23:29,005 --> 00:23:30,905
{\an1}you use that as a
chemical property,
522
00:23:30,938 --> 00:23:31,905
the boinginess.
523
00:23:31,938 --> 00:23:33,005
Yes, very technical.
524
00:23:33,038 --> 00:23:34,138
And... oh...
525
00:23:34,171 --> 00:23:36,138
(laughter)
Oh, man.
526
00:23:36,171 --> 00:23:40,105
{\an1}Natural rubber is often an
ingredient in tires,
527
00:23:40,138 --> 00:23:43,538
{\an1}but it's not the only one.
528
00:23:43,571 --> 00:23:45,871
{\an1}Today, many tires include
synthetic rubber,
529
00:23:45,905 --> 00:23:47,938
{\an1}made out of other monomers
530
00:23:47,971 --> 00:23:50,105
{\an1}not found in latex.
531
00:23:50,138 --> 00:23:51,871
♪
532
00:23:51,905 --> 00:23:52,905
POGUE: Oh ho!
533
00:23:52,938 --> 00:23:55,738
I'm sensing more polymers.
534
00:23:55,771 --> 00:23:58,405
{\an3}Yes.
More chains of molecules.
535
00:23:58,438 --> 00:23:59,771
{\an1}What do these represent?
536
00:23:59,805 --> 00:24:01,871
{\an8}So these are different
configurations of
537
00:24:01,905 --> 00:24:04,105
{\an7}polymers that we can make
in our laboratory.
538
00:24:04,138 --> 00:24:06,605
{\an1}Natural rubber is made of only
one type of monomer.
539
00:24:06,638 --> 00:24:08,405
{\an1}Here we can use different types
540
00:24:08,438 --> 00:24:10,671
{\an1}and bring them together with our
chemistry.
541
00:24:10,705 --> 00:24:12,805
And each way of linking themtogether
542
00:24:12,838 --> 00:24:15,871
produces different qualitiesin
the tire that will result?
543
00:24:15,905 --> 00:24:18,538
{\an1}Yup, so maybe the amount of
monomer can make a difference
544
00:24:18,571 --> 00:24:20,171
{\an1}in the properties,
how they're configured
545
00:24:20,205 --> 00:24:22,314
{\an1}can make a difference, andthat's
basically what we do here
546
00:24:22,338 --> 00:24:24,271
{\an1}is find different ways of
putting them together
547
00:24:24,305 --> 00:24:26,605
{\an1}so that we can achieve the
properties that we want.
548
00:24:26,638 --> 00:24:28,071
{\an1}Wow.
549
00:24:28,105 --> 00:24:32,471
Natural rubber,
synthetic rubber,
550
00:24:32,505 --> 00:24:37,705
{\an1}turns out, there's even more
that goes into tire rubber.
551
00:24:37,738 --> 00:24:40,705
{\an1}Here in the test lab,
552
00:24:40,738 --> 00:24:42,571
{\an1}technicians mix all the
ingredients together.
553
00:24:42,605 --> 00:24:45,838
{\an7}Like carbon black and silica,
554
00:24:45,871 --> 00:24:48,405
{\an7}which reinforce the tire.
555
00:24:48,438 --> 00:24:52,038
{\an7}Another key ingredient
is sulfur,
556
00:24:52,071 --> 00:24:55,705
{\an7}element number 16
on the periodic table.
557
00:24:55,738 --> 00:24:58,205
{\an1}The resulting blob
558
00:24:58,238 --> 00:25:00,538
{\an1}then gets rolled into sheets...
559
00:25:03,905 --> 00:25:07,738
{\an1}cut into squares for testing,
560
00:25:07,771 --> 00:25:09,071
{\an1}and baked at high temperature
561
00:25:09,105 --> 00:25:11,205
{\an1}in a process called
vulcanization.
562
00:25:13,738 --> 00:25:18,138
{\an1}Charles Goodyear discovered
the process in 1839
563
00:25:18,171 --> 00:25:20,038
{\an1}when he accidentally spilled
564
00:25:20,071 --> 00:25:23,205
{\an1}a mixture of rubber and sulfur
on a stove.
565
00:25:23,238 --> 00:25:29,738
{\an1}He named it after Vulcan,
the Roman god of fire.
566
00:25:29,771 --> 00:25:31,071
(bell chimes)
567
00:25:31,105 --> 00:25:32,505
♪
568
00:25:32,538 --> 00:25:35,438
{\an1}Cooking the rubber-sulfur
mixture
569
00:25:35,471 --> 00:25:38,471
{\an7}causes the sulfur
to chemically bond
570
00:25:38,505 --> 00:25:41,471
{\an1}the rubber's polymer chains
to each other,
571
00:25:41,505 --> 00:25:44,805
{\an1}forming crosslinks between them.
572
00:25:44,838 --> 00:25:46,638
♪
573
00:25:46,671 --> 00:25:48,905
{\an1}Bill Niaura, Bridgestone's
Director of Innovation,
574
00:25:48,938 --> 00:25:51,471
{\an1}shows me the result.
575
00:25:51,505 --> 00:25:53,305
{\an1}So this little bowtie, this was cut out of
576
00:25:53,338 --> 00:25:55,505
{\an1}one of those squaresbefore vulcanization.
577
00:25:55,538 --> 00:25:56,938
NIAURA:
It was.
578
00:25:56,971 --> 00:25:59,281
And this is what rubber
lookslike after that vulcanization?
579
00:25:59,305 --> 00:26:00,405
Correct.
580
00:26:00,438 --> 00:26:02,371
So, the only differencebetween these two
581
00:26:02,405 --> 00:26:04,271
is this one was super-heatedfor a while.
582
00:26:04,305 --> 00:26:05,605
Correct. All right.
583
00:26:05,638 --> 00:26:08,905
And according to you,
somethingproperty-wise has changed?
584
00:26:08,938 --> 00:26:10,205
It has.
585
00:26:10,238 --> 00:26:12,014
Why don't you take
the uncured one and stretch it.
586
00:26:12,038 --> 00:26:13,505
All right, this guy.
587
00:26:13,538 --> 00:26:15,071
Just pull it?
588
00:26:15,105 --> 00:26:16,405
Oh, wow.
589
00:26:16,438 --> 00:26:19,305
What you'll feel are the polymer
chains flowing apart,
590
00:26:19,338 --> 00:26:21,538
{\an1}it's acting like a liquid,
it's viscous.
591
00:26:21,571 --> 00:26:24,105
{\an1}It feels exactly like gum,
stretching gum.
592
00:26:24,138 --> 00:26:26,971
And when you release
the force...
593
00:26:27,005 --> 00:26:29,538
(laughs)
you'll see that it's flowed
apart and the energy
594
00:26:29,571 --> 00:26:31,605
{\an8}that you put in
has not been recovered
595
00:26:31,638 --> 00:26:34,038
and the piece has been
permanently deformed.
596
00:26:34,071 --> 00:26:35,671
{\an1}I broke your rubber sample.
597
00:26:35,705 --> 00:26:37,171
I'm okay with that.
598
00:26:37,205 --> 00:26:41,238
POGUE:
With all the new ingredients,
our unbaked tire mixture
599
00:26:41,271 --> 00:26:46,205
{\an1}is far less boingy than the
rubber I saw in Laura's lab.
600
00:26:46,238 --> 00:26:48,571
{\an1}When you stretch it,
601
00:26:48,605 --> 00:26:51,938
{\an1}the mixture's loosely coiled
polymer strands
602
00:26:51,971 --> 00:26:55,638
{\an1}slide past each other
and keep on sliding.
603
00:26:55,671 --> 00:26:58,671
{\an1}Only weak interactions holdthe
network of strands together,
604
00:26:58,705 --> 00:27:02,971
{\an1}so under stress, it pulls apart.
605
00:27:03,005 --> 00:27:05,771
{\an1}Okay, and then after
vulcanization, same test?
606
00:27:05,805 --> 00:27:07,405
Indeed.
607
00:27:07,438 --> 00:27:12,005
{\an8}Oh, man,
it's much harder to pull.
608
00:27:12,038 --> 00:27:13,314
{\an8}And when you
release the force...
609
00:27:13,338 --> 00:27:14,738
{\an1}Oh!
610
00:27:14,771 --> 00:27:16,381
You'll see that it's
recovered its original shape,
611
00:27:16,405 --> 00:27:20,005
{\an1}and that's a characteristic
of elasticity.
612
00:27:20,038 --> 00:27:21,638
♪
613
00:27:21,671 --> 00:27:25,271
POGUE:
Stretch out this vulcanized
interconnected web of strands,
614
00:27:25,305 --> 00:27:27,171
{\an1}and instead of ripping apart,
615
00:27:27,205 --> 00:27:30,938
{\an1}the network springs back
to its original shape.
616
00:27:30,971 --> 00:27:32,405
NIAURA:
Right. It's a cross section.
617
00:27:32,438 --> 00:27:34,005
POGUE:
But as Bill shows me,
618
00:27:34,038 --> 00:27:36,305
{\an1}with cross-sections
from different tires,
619
00:27:36,338 --> 00:27:38,905
{\an1}vulcanization doesn't just
connect up
620
00:27:38,938 --> 00:27:40,971
{\an1}individual rubber molecules,
621
00:27:41,005 --> 00:27:46,338
{\an1}it connects up everything
in the whole tire mixture.
622
00:27:46,371 --> 00:27:48,705
{\an1}NIAURA: As we cure the tires, we heat it.
623
00:27:48,738 --> 00:27:50,547
{\an1}That vulcanization reaction
not only cures the rubber
624
00:27:50,571 --> 00:27:51,938
within a compound,
625
00:27:51,971 --> 00:27:53,871
{\an7}it cures across compounds
626
00:27:53,905 --> 00:27:56,605
{\an7}to connect all of that into,
into one unit.
627
00:27:56,638 --> 00:27:59,238
{\an8}In the end,
it's essentially one molecule.
628
00:27:59,271 --> 00:28:00,338
{\an8}The whole tire?
It is.
629
00:28:00,371 --> 00:28:02,371
The whole tireis a molecule?
It is.
630
00:28:02,405 --> 00:28:04,405
(laughing): Well, how is thata molecule?
631
00:28:04,438 --> 00:28:05,738
So a molecule
632
00:28:05,771 --> 00:28:08,271
is a collection of atoms
that are chemically attached.
633
00:28:08,305 --> 00:28:09,305
Yeah.
634
00:28:09,338 --> 00:28:11,638
We've done that
through polymerization,
635
00:28:11,671 --> 00:28:13,181
{\an1}we've attached monomers
to make polymers,
636
00:28:13,205 --> 00:28:14,705
{\an1}and then through vulcanization,
637
00:28:14,738 --> 00:28:18,105
{\an1}we've attached the polymers
to make the finished product.
638
00:28:18,138 --> 00:28:21,238
{\an1}So I guess, therefore,
since this is all connected,
639
00:28:21,271 --> 00:28:23,971
{\an1}molecularly linkedto molecularly linked,
640
00:28:24,005 --> 00:28:26,105
{\an1}it is one giant molecule?
641
00:28:26,138 --> 00:28:27,938
It's beautiful.(laughs)
642
00:28:27,971 --> 00:28:29,938
{\an1}(engines roaring)
643
00:28:34,338 --> 00:28:36,971
POGUE:
Now that I know just how much
engineering goes into
644
00:28:37,005 --> 00:28:40,005
{\an1}those giant tire-shaped
molecules,
645
00:28:40,038 --> 00:28:41,938
{\an1}I have a new appreciation
646
00:28:41,971 --> 00:28:44,871
{\an1}for the rubber that keeps us all
on the road.
647
00:28:44,905 --> 00:28:49,738
{\an1}And for the people behind it,
like Cara Adams,
648
00:28:49,771 --> 00:28:52,205
{\an1}director of race tire
engineering and production
649
00:28:52,238 --> 00:28:55,438
{\an1}for Bridgestone/Firestone.
650
00:28:55,471 --> 00:28:59,571
{\an1}She oversees the race tire
operation, including Indy.
651
00:28:59,605 --> 00:29:01,138
♪
652
00:29:01,171 --> 00:29:06,338
Although interviewing her at
theoffice turns out to be... tough.
653
00:29:06,371 --> 00:29:08,181
{\an1}One of the things that
you're trying to look at
654
00:29:08,205 --> 00:29:09,805
{\an1}with a race car is aerodynamics.
655
00:29:09,838 --> 00:29:12,605
{\an1}(race car approaching)
656
00:29:12,638 --> 00:29:14,438
{\an1}If you think about a tire,
those are the only
657
00:29:14,471 --> 00:29:17,405
{\an1}point of contact between the
cars and the ground out there.
658
00:29:17,438 --> 00:29:18,571
{\an1}(race car speeding by)
659
00:29:18,605 --> 00:29:20,771
{\an1}That was a very small
four-inch wide rim so...
660
00:29:20,805 --> 00:29:25,205
{\an1}(race car speeding by,
Adams' voice become inaudible)
661
00:29:25,238 --> 00:29:28,671
{\an1}(another race car speeding by)
662
00:29:28,705 --> 00:29:30,514
{\an1}This is what you get for trying
to film at a racetrack.
663
00:29:30,538 --> 00:29:31,705
{\an7}POGUE: Yes, exactly.
664
00:29:31,738 --> 00:29:36,471
{\an1}So we move to a somewhat
quieter place.
665
00:29:36,505 --> 00:29:39,971
We think of car racing
as excitement, and adrenaline,
666
00:29:40,005 --> 00:29:41,205
really cool.
667
00:29:41,238 --> 00:29:43,471
{\an8}How much actual science
is there to it?
668
00:29:43,505 --> 00:29:45,271
{\an7}Well, there's a lot
of science and chemistry
669
00:29:45,305 --> 00:29:47,138
{\an7}and that actually goes in
the tires.
670
00:29:47,171 --> 00:29:48,447
{\an7}So we have engineers
that work with physics
671
00:29:48,471 --> 00:29:50,605
{\an7}to make sure the tiresare strong enough.
672
00:29:50,638 --> 00:29:52,914
{\an7}And then we have people that are
really smart in chemistry,
673
00:29:52,938 --> 00:29:55,605
{\an1}and they are actually ableto
design those tread compounds
674
00:29:55,638 --> 00:29:58,071
{\an1}that are running at
240 miles per hour
675
00:29:58,105 --> 00:29:59,338
{\an1}and adhering to the ground.
676
00:29:59,371 --> 00:30:00,571
{\an1}It's really exciting.
677
00:30:00,605 --> 00:30:03,638
{\an1}So are you trying to tell me
that the only thing
678
00:30:03,671 --> 00:30:09,471
{\an1}between Mario and meand
certain death is chemistry?
679
00:30:09,505 --> 00:30:11,138
{\an1}Chemistry and physics, absolutely.
680
00:30:11,171 --> 00:30:12,605
{\an1}(laughs)
681
00:30:14,738 --> 00:30:19,538
POGUE:
Both the natural rubber and
synthetic rubber used in tires
682
00:30:19,571 --> 00:30:23,171
{\an1}are elastomers, polymers with
elastic properties.
683
00:30:23,205 --> 00:30:27,405
{\an1}They allow tires to be
both flexible and durable...
684
00:30:27,438 --> 00:30:31,105
{\an1}(loud screeching)
685
00:30:31,138 --> 00:30:32,371
{\an1}...marvels of engineering.
686
00:30:32,405 --> 00:30:35,305
{\an1}But they have their limits.
687
00:30:35,338 --> 00:30:37,905
(loud pop)
688
00:30:37,938 --> 00:30:39,571
♪
689
00:30:39,605 --> 00:30:42,238
So what if you need an elastomer
that can hold it together
690
00:30:42,271 --> 00:30:44,671
{\an1}no matter what you throw at it?
691
00:30:44,705 --> 00:30:49,871
{\an1}Michael Tidd from the company
LINE-X has invited me here,
692
00:30:49,905 --> 00:30:53,005
{\an1}a lift in a back lot inWest
Springfield, Massachusetts,
693
00:30:53,038 --> 00:30:57,538
{\an1}to see an elastomer that can be
a protective coating.
694
00:30:57,571 --> 00:30:59,071
The day begins
695
00:30:59,105 --> 00:31:02,738
{\an1}with a tale of two pumpkins.
696
00:31:02,771 --> 00:31:05,238
{\an1}Pumpkins seem like they are
already blessed
697
00:31:05,271 --> 00:31:07,205
{\an1}with a certain degree
of protection.
698
00:31:07,238 --> 00:31:08,781
Nature has provided
a pretty good membrane
699
00:31:08,805 --> 00:31:11,014
{\an1}but I don't... I don't knowif
it was in the original design
700
00:31:11,038 --> 00:31:13,338
to drop it from 50 feet.
(laughs)
701
00:31:13,371 --> 00:31:14,771
Well let's doa "scientifical" test.
702
00:31:14,805 --> 00:31:16,414
{\an1}We could always give it a try
and see what happens.
703
00:31:16,438 --> 00:31:17,838
On three, ready?
704
00:31:17,871 --> 00:31:18,938
One, two... One, two...
705
00:31:18,971 --> 00:31:20,071
Three!
706
00:31:22,238 --> 00:31:24,238
{\an8}(David laughing)
707
00:31:25,371 --> 00:31:26,638
POGUE:
Well no surprise here...
708
00:31:30,505 --> 00:31:32,938
(laughing): It's... it's a squash vegetable
and a floor wax.
709
00:31:32,971 --> 00:31:34,338
That was the control
710
00:31:34,371 --> 00:31:38,505
{\an7}of a uncoated pumpkin as
youwould find them in nature, yes.
711
00:31:38,538 --> 00:31:40,138
♪
712
00:31:40,171 --> 00:31:42,538
POGUE:
Now it's time for a pumpkin
covered with Michael's
713
00:31:42,571 --> 00:31:45,705
{\an1}protective LINE-X coating.
714
00:31:45,738 --> 00:31:47,738
I have to say, it feels
a little bit like plastic.
715
00:31:47,771 --> 00:31:49,138
It is a lot like plastic.
716
00:31:49,171 --> 00:31:50,871
It has characteristicsof plastic.
717
00:31:50,905 --> 00:31:52,671
{\an1}However, it is an elastomer,
718
00:31:52,705 --> 00:31:54,705
{\an1}which means it could bestretched,
719
00:31:54,738 --> 00:31:56,438
{\an1}but it will return
to its original shape.
720
00:31:56,471 --> 00:32:00,238
{\an1}Uh, let's see if thishas any better effect.
721
00:32:00,271 --> 00:32:02,305
{\an1}One, two, three!
722
00:32:03,905 --> 00:32:05,238
{\an1}(David laughs)
723
00:32:05,271 --> 00:32:09,271
♪
724
00:32:09,305 --> 00:32:10,438
{\an7}The LINE-X-coated pumpkin
725
00:32:10,471 --> 00:32:13,305
{\an7}flexes to absorb the impact
726
00:32:13,338 --> 00:32:16,471
{\an7}then springs back into shape.
727
00:32:16,505 --> 00:32:19,605
{\an1}We try a few more
household objects.
728
00:32:19,638 --> 00:32:22,405
{\an1}This experiment is entitled
"When Pigs Fly".
729
00:32:23,638 --> 00:32:25,105
{\an7}(shatters loudly)
730
00:32:25,138 --> 00:32:28,338
{\an1}Can you guess what will happen
to the egg when we drop it?
731
00:32:28,371 --> 00:32:33,371
{\an8}♪
732
00:32:33,405 --> 00:32:35,405
{\an1}The flower pot's last moments.
733
00:32:35,438 --> 00:32:39,371
♪
734
00:32:39,405 --> 00:32:42,771
{\an1}And I run a few comparisons
myself...
735
00:32:42,805 --> 00:32:50,138
{\an8}♪
736
00:32:50,171 --> 00:32:52,071
(grunts)
737
00:32:53,571 --> 00:33:00,038
{\an8}Finally...
bringing out the big guns.
738
00:33:00,071 --> 00:33:07,271
{\an8}♪
739
00:33:07,305 --> 00:33:08,671
{\an8}No way...
740
00:33:08,705 --> 00:33:10,138
{\an8}(voiceover):
Okay I get it.
741
00:33:10,171 --> 00:33:12,938
{\an7}The stuff is tough.
742
00:33:12,971 --> 00:33:16,905
{\an7}But what's going on inside
that coating?
743
00:33:16,938 --> 00:33:20,205
{\an7}Did the objects survive intact?
744
00:33:20,238 --> 00:33:21,805
(saw whirring)
745
00:33:21,838 --> 00:33:23,605
{\an1}Michael cuts open
our dropped pumpkin
746
00:33:23,638 --> 00:33:26,738
{\an1}to see the state of affairs...
747
00:33:26,771 --> 00:33:29,371
{\an1}(whirring continues)
748
00:33:29,405 --> 00:33:31,005
(whirring stops)
749
00:33:31,038 --> 00:33:34,571
(David laughs)
750
00:33:34,605 --> 00:33:36,105
{\an1}It's pumpkin pudding!
751
00:33:36,138 --> 00:33:37,905
A lot of damage.
752
00:33:37,938 --> 00:33:40,905
So, the pumpkin is gone,
but the coating did just fine?
753
00:33:40,938 --> 00:33:42,038
Correct
754
00:33:42,071 --> 00:33:43,871
But when would you care about
755
00:33:43,905 --> 00:33:47,371
not protecting the gutsof something
756
00:33:47,405 --> 00:33:48,538
but the outside is fine?
757
00:33:48,571 --> 00:33:50,605
A lot of times,
we will put it on a membrane,
758
00:33:50,638 --> 00:33:53,105
{\an1}such as a wall or a floor
759
00:33:53,138 --> 00:33:56,971
{\an1}where we're trying to protect
what's on the other side.
760
00:33:57,005 --> 00:33:59,805
POGUE:
Here's a test of that idea.
761
00:33:59,838 --> 00:34:04,138
{\an7}This simulated car bomb
blows down an exterior wall.
762
00:34:04,171 --> 00:34:07,338
(loud explosion)
763
00:34:07,371 --> 00:34:09,005
♪
764
00:34:09,038 --> 00:34:11,938
{\an1}But with a coating of LINE-X
on the outside
765
00:34:11,971 --> 00:34:14,171
{\an1}and the inside of the wall...
766
00:34:14,205 --> 00:34:16,071
{\an1}(muffled explosions)
767
00:34:16,105 --> 00:34:20,471
{\an1}...it becomes more of a dust-up.
768
00:34:20,505 --> 00:34:21,538
♪
769
00:34:21,571 --> 00:34:23,005
{\an1}So what is this stuff?
770
00:34:23,038 --> 00:34:26,105
{\an1}Well there's more than
one flavor of LINE-X,
771
00:34:26,138 --> 00:34:28,971
{\an1}but the coating on our
power pumpkins is the result
772
00:34:29,005 --> 00:34:32,338
{\an1}of a reaction between
two ingredients.
773
00:34:32,371 --> 00:34:36,371
{\an1}The first is a highly reactive
molecule.
774
00:34:36,405 --> 00:34:37,871
♪
775
00:34:37,905 --> 00:34:40,138
At each end
of its carbon backbone,
776
00:34:40,171 --> 00:34:43,805
{\an1}there's a nitrogen, carbon,
and oxygen group
777
00:34:43,838 --> 00:34:48,038
{\an7}called an isocyanate that acts
like a hook to lock onto...
778
00:34:48,071 --> 00:34:51,371
{\an7}the second chemical ingredient.
779
00:34:51,405 --> 00:34:56,505
{\an7}It's a polyamine... a member of a
chemical group called resins.
780
00:34:56,538 --> 00:34:59,171
{\an7}LINE-X heats the two ingredients
781
00:34:59,205 --> 00:35:00,905
{\an1}and feeds them under pressure
782
00:35:00,938 --> 00:35:02,471
to this sprayer,
783
00:35:02,505 --> 00:35:05,471
which mixes them
just as they exit.
784
00:35:05,505 --> 00:35:08,571
Immediately,
the first ingredient hooks on
785
00:35:08,605 --> 00:35:12,305
{\an1}to part of the resin,
and all those linkages create
786
00:35:12,338 --> 00:35:16,205
{\an1}long entangled polymer chains
similar to rubber
787
00:35:16,238 --> 00:35:21,438
{\an1}so that they're flexible
but also much tougher.
788
00:35:21,471 --> 00:35:25,238
{\an7}The resulting elastomer
is called a "polyurea"...
789
00:35:25,271 --> 00:35:29,505
{\an7}a cousin to the more familiar
polyurethanes.
790
00:35:29,538 --> 00:35:33,805
{\an1}So, that's the general idea,
though they tweak the chemistry
791
00:35:33,838 --> 00:35:36,038
{\an1}for different applications.
792
00:35:36,071 --> 00:35:39,871
Most of LINE-X's
consumer business
793
00:35:39,905 --> 00:35:42,038
{\an1}is spray-on truck bedliners.
794
00:35:42,071 --> 00:35:45,171
Not so much
for protecting produce
795
00:35:45,205 --> 00:35:49,338
{\an1}or making kid's toys last...
forever.
796
00:35:49,371 --> 00:35:51,971
♪
797
00:35:52,005 --> 00:35:56,338
The main ingredients for LINE-X
and synthetic rubber
798
00:35:56,371 --> 00:36:01,338
{\an1}come from fossil fuels
like refined crude oil.
799
00:36:01,371 --> 00:36:03,271
When we pump oil
from the ground,
800
00:36:03,305 --> 00:36:05,105
{\an1}it's a rich soup of molecules
801
00:36:05,138 --> 00:36:10,205
{\an7}built around that tinker toy
wonder element... carbon.
802
00:36:10,238 --> 00:36:16,805
{\an7}They come in chains, rings,
trees, and other shapes.
803
00:36:16,838 --> 00:36:20,305
{\an1}Refining separates those
molecules by kind,
804
00:36:20,338 --> 00:36:23,071
{\an1}and in some cases,
breaks up bigger ones,
805
00:36:23,105 --> 00:36:28,771
{\an1}turning them into smaller,
moreuseful molecules, like gasoline.
806
00:36:28,805 --> 00:36:32,971
{\an1}Refining also supplies industry
with the basic building blocks
807
00:36:33,005 --> 00:36:35,638
{\an1}for another group
of synthetic polymers
808
00:36:35,671 --> 00:36:39,438
{\an1}that came to dominate our way
of life in the 20th century...
809
00:36:39,471 --> 00:36:42,705
Plastics.
810
00:36:42,738 --> 00:36:46,705
{\an1}Today, plastic is everywhere.
811
00:36:46,738 --> 00:36:48,071
{\an1}You can find it in tea bags...
812
00:36:48,105 --> 00:36:49,371
ribbon...
813
00:36:49,405 --> 00:36:51,338
{\an1}the inside of paper coffee
cups...
814
00:36:51,371 --> 00:36:52,505
sunscreen...
815
00:36:52,538 --> 00:36:53,871
toothpaste...
816
00:36:53,905 --> 00:36:55,271
sponges...
817
00:36:55,305 --> 00:36:56,705
most clothing...
818
00:36:56,738 --> 00:36:58,805
{\an1}the fish you eat...
819
00:36:58,838 --> 00:37:01,138
{\an1}...and even salt.
820
00:37:02,505 --> 00:37:05,538
{\an1}Malika Jeffries-El plays with
the molecular building blocks
821
00:37:05,571 --> 00:37:07,505
{\an1}of plastic for a living.
822
00:37:07,538 --> 00:37:11,071
{\an1}She's a polymer chemist
at Boston University.
823
00:37:11,105 --> 00:37:13,205
So clearly, there's all kinds of
824
00:37:13,238 --> 00:37:14,705
different plastics,
825
00:37:14,738 --> 00:37:15,971
but is there something
826
00:37:16,005 --> 00:37:19,071
{\an1}that unites them all that makes
a plastic a plastic?
827
00:37:19,105 --> 00:37:21,005
{\an7}Plastics are a subset
of polymers,
828
00:37:21,038 --> 00:37:23,405
{\an7}in that they're known not just
for having their
829
00:37:23,438 --> 00:37:24,738
{\an7}macromolecular structure
830
00:37:24,771 --> 00:37:27,171
{\an7}but the processing
and mechanical properties
831
00:37:27,205 --> 00:37:29,371
{\an1}that come from, as a result
of that structure.
832
00:37:29,405 --> 00:37:31,371
Like bendy-ness and... Exactly.
833
00:37:31,405 --> 00:37:33,005
Strength.Exactly.
834
00:37:33,038 --> 00:37:36,005
Strength, exactly. Strength, flexibility,
835
00:37:36,038 --> 00:37:38,205
rigidity would beanother property.
836
00:37:38,238 --> 00:37:42,305
POGUE:
Like rubber,
all plastics are polymers...
837
00:37:42,338 --> 00:37:46,905
{\an1}long molecules made up
of subunits called monomers.
838
00:37:46,938 --> 00:37:50,305
{\an1}What makes each of
thesepolymer-based materials distinct
839
00:37:50,338 --> 00:37:52,738
{\an1}are the combinations
of the different monomers
840
00:37:52,771 --> 00:37:54,671
{\an1}used to make them.
841
00:37:54,705 --> 00:37:56,647
{\an1}For example, this is
actuallyreally hard and rigid,
842
00:37:56,671 --> 00:37:59,205
{\an1}and one of the units in hereis styrene,
843
00:37:59,238 --> 00:38:00,205
{\an1}and this is polystyrene.
844
00:38:00,238 --> 00:38:01,571
Not hard and rigid at all.
845
00:38:01,605 --> 00:38:02,671
Not hard and rigid at all,
846
00:38:02,705 --> 00:38:04,638
{\an1}but when you blend in
the other molecules,
847
00:38:04,671 --> 00:38:06,038
{\an1}you get different properties.
848
00:38:06,071 --> 00:38:07,038
{\an3}Wow.
849
00:38:07,071 --> 00:38:09,505
POGUE:
But it's not all chemistry.
850
00:38:09,538 --> 00:38:12,371
{\an1}Processing can turn
the same plastic
851
00:38:12,405 --> 00:38:15,205
{\an1}into very different products.
852
00:38:15,238 --> 00:38:20,105
{\an8}JEFFRIES-EL:
These were actually molded and
blown into this bottle shape,
853
00:38:20,138 --> 00:38:22,671
{\an1}and in this case,
really small fibers were spun
854
00:38:22,705 --> 00:38:26,371
{\an1}from the polymer and then
processed to make this.
855
00:38:26,405 --> 00:38:27,814
And it comes out
soft and comfortable.
856
00:38:27,838 --> 00:38:30,871
Comes out soft and comfortable.
857
00:38:30,905 --> 00:38:34,471
POGUE:
Our Age of Plastics
isn't very old.
858
00:38:34,505 --> 00:38:38,738
It was this guy, Leo Baekeland,
who gets credit
859
00:38:38,771 --> 00:38:42,038
{\an1}for the first fully synthetic
plastic.
860
00:38:42,071 --> 00:38:44,538
{\an1}He called it Bakelite,
861
00:38:44,571 --> 00:38:47,871
{\an1}and by the 1920s,
it had become a big hit
862
00:38:47,905 --> 00:38:49,905
{\an1}in all kinds of products...
863
00:38:49,938 --> 00:38:52,105
{\an1}from radios to kitchenware...
864
00:38:52,138 --> 00:38:53,571
to kids' toys...
865
00:38:53,605 --> 00:38:56,505
and coming in
a variety of colors.
866
00:38:56,538 --> 00:39:02,105
{\an7}Malika has offered to whip up
some of this landmark plastic.
867
00:39:02,138 --> 00:39:06,938
{\an1}It's made from two monomers:
phenol,
868
00:39:06,971 --> 00:39:11,071
{\an7}a ring of six carbon atoms
bonded to five hydrogens,
869
00:39:11,105 --> 00:39:14,471
{\an7}and an oxygen bonded
to a hydrogen;
870
00:39:14,505 --> 00:39:16,805
{\an7}and formaldehyde,
871
00:39:16,838 --> 00:39:20,205
{\an7}one carbon atom bonded
to two hydrogens
872
00:39:20,238 --> 00:39:23,705
{\an7}and double bonded to an oxygen.
873
00:39:23,738 --> 00:39:26,505
{\an8}After dissolving
the solid phenol
874
00:39:26,538 --> 00:39:28,871
{\an7}into the formaldehyde
solution...
875
00:39:28,905 --> 00:39:33,405
{\an7}Malika adds two acids
to start up the process.
876
00:39:33,438 --> 00:39:35,805
Then we wait.
877
00:39:35,838 --> 00:39:38,371
{\an8}JEFFRIES-EL:
There should kind of be
this "a-ha" moment
878
00:39:38,405 --> 00:39:40,605
{\an8}and it should just go.
879
00:39:40,638 --> 00:39:42,305
{\an8}POGUE:
Are you saying
it's gonna harden?
880
00:39:42,338 --> 00:39:43,505
{\an1}Yeah, it should get cloudy
881
00:39:43,538 --> 00:39:46,038
and polymer should come
crashing out.
882
00:39:46,071 --> 00:39:47,481
{\an8}JEFFRIES-EL:
I feel like it's
getting pinker,
883
00:39:47,505 --> 00:39:49,247
{\an7}which is an indication that
the chemistry is changing.
884
00:39:49,271 --> 00:39:51,505
{\an8}POGUE:
Oh! Did you see that!?
885
00:39:51,538 --> 00:39:54,438
{\an8}Like instantaneously!
886
00:39:54,471 --> 00:39:58,505
{\an7}Right before our eyes,
the phenol and formaldehyde
887
00:39:58,538 --> 00:40:01,938
{\an7}molecules link up,
giving off water molecules
888
00:40:01,971 --> 00:40:07,071
{\an8}while creating
long polymer chains.
889
00:40:07,105 --> 00:40:10,805
{\an8}You made plastic!
890
00:40:10,838 --> 00:40:13,505
{\an8}Look at that.
891
00:40:13,538 --> 00:40:15,505
{\an8}Genuine, crusty, hard,
892
00:40:15,538 --> 00:40:18,205
{\an8}hard plastic.
893
00:40:18,238 --> 00:40:19,347
JEFFRIES-EL:
So this is an example
894
00:40:19,371 --> 00:40:21,171
{\an1}of a thermoset plastic.
895
00:40:21,205 --> 00:40:23,071
{\an1}Once it's set into place
with heat,
896
00:40:23,105 --> 00:40:24,105
{\an1}you can't reform it
897
00:40:24,138 --> 00:40:26,471
or reshape it
with additional heat.
898
00:40:26,505 --> 00:40:30,538
Oh okay, so this... so
unlikea plastic drink bottle...
899
00:40:30,571 --> 00:40:32,038
{\an8}That's right.
900
00:40:32,071 --> 00:40:34,571
{\an8}...you can't melt this down and
reform it into something else.
901
00:40:34,605 --> 00:40:35,571
{\an3}No.
902
00:40:35,605 --> 00:40:37,038
{\an3}This is Bakelitenow and forever.
903
00:40:37,071 --> 00:40:38,605
That's stuck
like that forever, yup.
904
00:40:38,638 --> 00:40:40,571
♪
905
00:40:40,605 --> 00:40:42,971
POGUE:
In a thermoset plastic
like Bakelite,
906
00:40:43,005 --> 00:40:47,271
{\an1}the bonds between the polymer
chains are extremely strong.
907
00:40:47,305 --> 00:40:50,738
{\an1}By the time you've applied
enough heat to break them,
908
00:40:50,771 --> 00:40:53,538
{\an1}the chains themselves
have decomposed.
909
00:40:53,571 --> 00:40:57,271
{\an1}So you can't re-melt
thermoset plastics
910
00:40:57,305 --> 00:41:00,505
{\an1}or reshape them for recycling.
911
00:41:00,538 --> 00:41:04,038
{\an7}But not all plastics
are thermoset.
912
00:41:04,071 --> 00:41:05,338
{\an8}There's nylon,
913
00:41:05,371 --> 00:41:08,771
{\an1}the first commerciallysuccessful
plastic that wasn't.
914
00:41:08,805 --> 00:41:13,171
{\an1}It came to public attention
at the 1939 World's Fair
915
00:41:13,205 --> 00:41:17,038
{\an1}as a substitute for silk
in women's stockings.
916
00:41:17,071 --> 00:41:19,838
{\an1}And its importance grew
during World War II.
917
00:41:19,871 --> 00:41:24,838
{\an1}At the time, the main source
of silk for parachutes
918
00:41:24,871 --> 00:41:27,205
{\an1}was America's enemy... Japan.
919
00:41:27,238 --> 00:41:33,138
{\an1}So the military recruited nylon
as a replacement.
920
00:41:33,171 --> 00:41:38,705
{\an1}Malika offers me some firsthand
experience making nylon.
921
00:41:38,738 --> 00:41:41,238
{\an1}If you want to make nylon,
don't you need, like a factory?
922
00:41:41,271 --> 00:41:43,205
{\an1}Well if you want to
makea lot of nylon, yeah,
923
00:41:43,238 --> 00:41:44,971
{\an1}then you're going to needa factory.
924
00:41:45,005 --> 00:41:46,671
{\an1}But if we're just goingto do a demo,
925
00:41:46,705 --> 00:41:48,714
{\an1}we're going to make a little
bitof nylon and we can do it
926
00:41:48,738 --> 00:41:50,505
{\an1}in a little beaker.
All right, like for...
927
00:41:50,538 --> 00:41:51,671
for mouse stockings.
928
00:41:51,705 --> 00:41:53,671
Yes, exactly.(laughs)
929
00:41:53,705 --> 00:41:56,471
{\an1}To do this we're going to mix
together two chemicals.
930
00:41:56,505 --> 00:41:58,971
POGUE:
There are lots of variations
on nylon.
931
00:41:59,005 --> 00:42:03,038
{\an1}Our two key components
will be two molecules that are
932
00:42:03,071 --> 00:42:05,005
{\an1}simpler than they sound...
933
00:42:05,038 --> 00:42:08,438
{\an7}hexamethylenediamine
934
00:42:08,471 --> 00:42:11,438
{\an7}and adipoyl chloride.
935
00:42:11,471 --> 00:42:14,271
{\an7}Since they each have
a six-carbon chain...
936
00:42:18,071 --> 00:42:22,505
{\an7}we're making what's called
Nylon 6,6.
937
00:42:22,538 --> 00:42:24,847
{\an8}JEFFRIES-EL: So the first
thingwe're going to do is we're going
938
00:42:24,871 --> 00:42:27,205
{\an8}to add the hexamethylenediamine.
939
00:42:27,238 --> 00:42:29,038
{\an8}POGUE:
So mostly colored water.
940
00:42:29,071 --> 00:42:30,471
{\an8}Mostly colored water
941
00:42:30,505 --> 00:42:33,005
{\an8}with some cool organicsin there.
All right.
942
00:42:33,038 --> 00:42:35,771
{\an8}And then we're going
to addour organic layer
943
00:42:35,805 --> 00:42:38,905
{\an8}of the adipoyl chloridesolution.
944
00:42:38,938 --> 00:42:40,471
{\an8}And because the densityof this
945
00:42:40,505 --> 00:42:43,371
{\an8}is less than thatof the water,
946
00:42:43,405 --> 00:42:44,438
{\an8}it should float
947
00:42:44,471 --> 00:42:46,771
{\an8}on the surface of the water.
948
00:42:46,805 --> 00:42:48,505
Kind of like oil and vinegar.
949
00:42:48,538 --> 00:42:50,671
POGUE:
Where the two liquids meet,
950
00:42:50,705 --> 00:42:53,538
the molecules
of the hexamethylenediamine
951
00:42:53,571 --> 00:42:55,705
{\an1}and adipoyl chloride link up,
952
00:42:55,738 --> 00:43:00,705
{\an1}one after another, releasing
hydrogen chloride as a gas.
953
00:43:00,738 --> 00:43:03,271
{\an7}Malika gives me the honor
954
00:43:03,305 --> 00:43:07,138
{\an7}of pulling the newborn nylon
polymer out of the beaker.
955
00:43:07,171 --> 00:43:11,005
{\an1}And as more of the two liquids
come into contact,
956
00:43:11,038 --> 00:43:12,871
{\an1}they make more nylon.
957
00:43:12,905 --> 00:43:16,038
{\an7}Do you have a ladder, Malika?
958
00:43:16,071 --> 00:43:18,438
{\an7}There you go.
Look at that.
959
00:43:18,471 --> 00:43:22,471
Freshly baked, free-range nylon.
960
00:43:22,505 --> 00:43:23,705
Amazingly,
961
00:43:23,738 --> 00:43:27,605
this really is a junior version
of how bulk nylon
962
00:43:27,638 --> 00:43:29,438
is manufactured.
963
00:43:29,471 --> 00:43:30,405
All right...
964
00:43:30,438 --> 00:43:33,638
{\an1}anyone need stockings?
965
00:43:33,671 --> 00:43:35,271
Unlike Bakelite,
966
00:43:35,305 --> 00:43:37,705
{\an7}nylon is an example
of a thermoplastic,
967
00:43:37,738 --> 00:43:40,738
{\an7}which we can reheat and reform.
968
00:43:40,771 --> 00:43:45,505
{\an7}That's the basis of some
plastic recycling.
969
00:43:45,538 --> 00:43:48,605
{\an7}Malika wants to show me
one more example.
970
00:43:48,638 --> 00:43:50,338
{\an1}And this time what are we
going to make?
971
00:43:50,371 --> 00:43:52,871
{\an1}Um, so for this demonstrationl
thought I would show you
972
00:43:52,905 --> 00:43:54,971
{\an1}how we make polyurethane foams.
973
00:43:55,005 --> 00:43:57,238
And what do we use
polyurethane foam
974
00:43:57,271 --> 00:43:58,538
for in the world?
975
00:43:58,571 --> 00:44:01,505
Polyurethane is usedin
like seat cushions, uh...
976
00:44:01,538 --> 00:44:03,605
{\an1}and also insulation.
977
00:44:03,638 --> 00:44:05,614
{\an1}You think about like blown foam
and things like that.
978
00:44:05,638 --> 00:44:06,538
Oh yeah.
979
00:44:06,571 --> 00:44:07,881
(imitating E.T.):
E.T. blown foam.
980
00:44:07,905 --> 00:44:09,147
Yeah, I remember that.(laughing)
981
00:44:09,171 --> 00:44:11,038
♪
982
00:44:11,071 --> 00:44:13,138
POGUE:
There are two key reactants.
983
00:44:13,171 --> 00:44:17,038
{\an1}First up is a type of molecule
with an oxygen-hydrogen hook
984
00:44:17,071 --> 00:44:19,005
at either end.
985
00:44:19,038 --> 00:44:22,205
{\an1}Aside from its role
in polyurethanes,
986
00:44:22,238 --> 00:44:23,371
{\an1}this one shows up
987
00:44:23,405 --> 00:44:24,638
in paintballs
988
00:44:24,671 --> 00:44:26,638
{\an1}and laxatives too.
989
00:44:26,671 --> 00:44:30,005
{\an1}The other reactant
we've already met at LINE-X...
990
00:44:30,038 --> 00:44:33,071
{\an1}that carbon-backboned
isocyanate molecule
991
00:44:33,105 --> 00:44:37,705
{\an1}with the nitrogen/carbon/oxygen
hooks at either end.
992
00:44:37,738 --> 00:44:40,671
{\an1}JEFFRIES-EL: And we stir this together.
993
00:44:40,705 --> 00:44:42,347
{\an1}And so you can already
seeit's starting to react
994
00:44:42,371 --> 00:44:43,481
{\an1}because it's starting to get
995
00:44:43,505 --> 00:44:46,105
{\an7}milky and it's starting
to grow in size.
996
00:44:46,138 --> 00:44:47,871
{\an7}You can see it's rising up
a little bit.
997
00:44:47,905 --> 00:44:50,971
POGUE:
The two molecules begin
to link up to form
998
00:44:51,005 --> 00:44:53,605
{\an1}a polyurethane polymer.
999
00:44:53,638 --> 00:44:55,538
♪
1000
00:44:55,571 --> 00:44:56,671
{\an1}At the same time,
1001
00:44:56,705 --> 00:44:59,505
{\an7}one ingredient also reacts
with some water
1002
00:44:59,538 --> 00:45:03,705
{\an7}generating carbon dioxide gas.
1003
00:45:03,738 --> 00:45:05,405
{\an7}That's what causes the bubbling
1004
00:45:05,438 --> 00:45:10,205
{\an7}and ultimately the foam when
the polyurethane grows rigid.
1005
00:45:10,238 --> 00:45:14,571
{\an8}♪
1006
00:45:14,605 --> 00:45:15,571
I know I'm tacky but...
1007
00:45:15,605 --> 00:45:17,171
(chortling):
Oh!
1008
00:45:17,205 --> 00:45:21,005
And the cup's entombed
inside there.
1009
00:45:21,038 --> 00:45:23,271
(chuckling): Yeah, the
cup is... the cup is gone.
1010
00:45:23,305 --> 00:45:26,705
POGUE:
Pretty cool,
but it's just a start.
1011
00:45:26,738 --> 00:45:29,771
{\an7}Because when in foam...
1012
00:45:29,805 --> 00:45:33,171
{\an7}do as the... Foam-mans do?
1013
00:45:33,205 --> 00:45:36,271
♪
1014
00:45:37,638 --> 00:45:39,738
(David cackling)
1015
00:45:39,771 --> 00:45:43,405
♪
1016
00:45:43,438 --> 00:45:45,038
There we go...
1017
00:45:45,071 --> 00:45:47,005
{\an1}Years of snowman training.
1018
00:45:47,038 --> 00:45:48,571
{\an1}(Malika laughing)
1019
00:45:48,605 --> 00:45:52,738
{\an7}We'll open a 529 plan,
we'll buy some diapers...
1020
00:45:52,771 --> 00:45:54,805
{\an7}Nothing but the bestfor you.
1021
00:45:54,838 --> 00:45:56,738
{\an7}He has your smile.
1022
00:45:56,771 --> 00:45:58,671
{\an1}(laughing uproariously)
1023
00:45:58,705 --> 00:46:00,505
♪
1024
00:46:00,538 --> 00:46:02,371
POGUE:
At this point...
1025
00:46:02,405 --> 00:46:03,671
{\an1}Polycarbonate.
1026
00:46:03,705 --> 00:46:05,181
POGUE:
you're probably getting
the idea.
1027
00:46:05,205 --> 00:46:06,705
Polyethylene terepthalate...
1028
00:46:06,738 --> 00:46:08,005
P.E.T.E.
1029
00:46:08,038 --> 00:46:10,371
POGUE:
That there are lots of
different plastics...
1030
00:46:10,405 --> 00:46:11,938
{\an1}Polyvinylchloride...
1031
00:46:11,971 --> 00:46:13,405
{\an1}PVC.
1032
00:46:13,438 --> 00:46:15,038
POGUE: each made out of polymers...
1033
00:46:15,071 --> 00:46:16,571
These are examplesof polyamides.
1034
00:46:16,605 --> 00:46:18,605
Commercially known as nylon.
1035
00:46:18,638 --> 00:46:20,971
POGUE:
constructed sort of
the same way...
1036
00:46:21,005 --> 00:46:22,138
Polystyrene.
1037
00:46:22,171 --> 00:46:24,405
POGUE:
but out of different
subunits...
1038
00:46:24,438 --> 00:46:26,538
Polypropylene... PP.
1039
00:46:26,571 --> 00:46:29,205
POGUE:
to obtain very different
material properties.
1040
00:46:29,238 --> 00:46:31,138
Low-density polyethylene...
1041
00:46:31,171 --> 00:46:32,671
{\an1}LDPE.
1042
00:46:32,705 --> 00:46:36,138
POGUE:
And then if you start throwing
in additives and fillers...
1043
00:46:36,171 --> 00:46:38,038
Polyvinylalcohol...
1044
00:46:38,071 --> 00:46:39,805
{\an3}PVA.
1045
00:46:39,838 --> 00:46:41,138
POGUE:
like colorants...
1046
00:46:41,171 --> 00:46:43,171
High-density polyethylene...
1047
00:46:43,205 --> 00:46:44,505
{\an1}HDPE.
1048
00:46:44,538 --> 00:46:47,305
POGUE:
flame retardants,
glass, or carbon fibers...
1049
00:46:47,338 --> 00:46:48,971
Polymethylmethacrylate...
1050
00:46:49,005 --> 00:46:50,171
{\an1}PMMA.
1051
00:46:50,205 --> 00:46:52,671
POGUE:
you end up with
tens of thousands
1052
00:46:52,705 --> 00:46:54,371
{\an1}of grades of plastic...
1053
00:46:54,405 --> 00:46:55,905
{\an1}Polyoxymethylene...
1054
00:46:55,938 --> 00:46:57,705
{\an1}P.O.M.
1055
00:46:57,738 --> 00:47:00,771
POGUE:
each tailored for
a specific purpose.
1056
00:47:00,805 --> 00:47:03,271
Which has created the problem...
1057
00:47:03,305 --> 00:47:06,805
{\an1}what do we do with them
when that job is finished?
1058
00:47:08,838 --> 00:47:10,005
♪
1059
00:47:10,038 --> 00:47:12,105
{\an1}Mostly, we throw them out.
1060
00:47:12,138 --> 00:47:17,771
{\an1}91% of all the plastic we make
ends up in landfills...
1061
00:47:17,805 --> 00:47:19,038
or burned...
1062
00:47:19,071 --> 00:47:23,938
{\an1}...or just escapes
into the environment.
1063
00:47:23,971 --> 00:47:28,205
{\an1}The remaining 9% is recycled.
1064
00:47:28,238 --> 00:47:31,905
{\an1}But first, the plastic has to be
carefully separated by type,
1065
00:47:31,938 --> 00:47:34,038
{\an7}those recycling number symbols.
1066
00:47:34,071 --> 00:47:39,138
{\an7}Any mix-up there can contaminate
an otherwise reusable plastic,
1067
00:47:39,171 --> 00:47:41,771
{\an1}rendering it worthless.
1068
00:47:43,305 --> 00:47:44,814
{\an1}And there aren't many places
willing to do
1069
00:47:44,838 --> 00:47:47,271
{\an1}that separating work.
1070
00:47:47,305 --> 00:47:51,705
{\an1}In 2018, China stopped accepting
shipments
1071
00:47:51,738 --> 00:47:54,505
{\an1}of bulk unsorted plastic
from the U.S.,
1072
00:47:54,538 --> 00:47:57,371
{\an1}or anywhere else in the world.
1073
00:47:57,405 --> 00:48:01,271
{\an1}With the economics of recycling
in turmoil,
1074
00:48:01,305 --> 00:48:04,971
{\an1}lately the discussion
hasshifted to single-use plastics,
1075
00:48:05,005 --> 00:48:08,238
{\an1}about half of all the plastic
we produce.
1076
00:48:08,271 --> 00:48:11,871
{\an1}Much of it is food related.
1077
00:48:11,905 --> 00:48:16,938
{\an1}To learn more, I travel
to the University of Georgia
1078
00:48:16,971 --> 00:48:20,305
{\an1}to meet Jason Locklin,
a chemistry professor
1079
00:48:20,338 --> 00:48:23,738
{\an1}and the director of its
New Materials Institute.
1080
00:48:23,771 --> 00:48:25,805
{\an1}Well, thanks for meeting me
here, Jason.
1081
00:48:25,838 --> 00:48:27,805
I brought you breakfast. All right!
1082
00:48:27,838 --> 00:48:33,138
POGUE:
Well, breakfast and a bag
of single-use problems.
1083
00:48:33,171 --> 00:48:34,538
This is called
1084
00:48:34,571 --> 00:48:35,838
{\an1}a clamshell container.
1085
00:48:35,871 --> 00:48:38,938
{\an1}Less than 1% of all polystyrene
is recycled globally.
1086
00:48:38,971 --> 00:48:40,871
{\an7}If this makes its way
into the landfill,
1087
00:48:40,905 --> 00:48:43,138
{\an7}which is exactly where it'll go,
1088
00:48:43,171 --> 00:48:45,205
{\an7}it'll persist thereforever.
1089
00:48:45,238 --> 00:48:46,905
{\an1}We have a plastic straw.
1090
00:48:46,938 --> 00:48:50,171
{\an1}It'll stay there for hundreds,
if not thousands, of years.
1091
00:48:50,205 --> 00:48:51,738
{\an1}Is that really a way
1092
00:48:51,771 --> 00:48:55,371
{\an1}to design packaging... to
have a material that you use
1093
00:48:55,405 --> 00:48:56,871
{\an1}for ten seconds,
1094
00:48:56,905 --> 00:49:00,838
{\an1}and then it goes to a landfill
for a thousand years?
1095
00:49:00,871 --> 00:49:02,905
POGUE:
Even packaging
that looks recyclable,
1096
00:49:02,938 --> 00:49:06,905
{\an1}like paper takeout containers,
may not be because...
1097
00:49:06,938 --> 00:49:10,205
{\an1}well, they have to hold food.
1098
00:49:10,238 --> 00:49:12,871
LOCKLIN:
If you put food into
1099
00:49:12,905 --> 00:49:15,738
a paper towel, what happens to it?
1100
00:49:15,771 --> 00:49:17,371
It's going to get soggy
and fall apart.
1101
00:49:17,405 --> 00:49:18,471
Exactly.
1102
00:49:18,505 --> 00:49:20,281
So, in order to make
thisa takeout container,
1103
00:49:20,305 --> 00:49:22,571
we have to coat it with plastic.
1104
00:49:22,605 --> 00:49:25,271
{\an1}It essentially prohibits
our ability to recycle it.
1105
00:49:25,305 --> 00:49:27,071
Wow.
1106
00:49:27,105 --> 00:49:28,271
So is there any solution
1107
00:49:28,305 --> 00:49:30,171
to that problem? So here's just an example.
1108
00:49:30,205 --> 00:49:32,771
If you pull the filmoff that plastic,
1109
00:49:32,805 --> 00:49:34,171
this is aboutwhat it looks like.
1110
00:49:34,205 --> 00:49:38,871
But this film is madeout
of a material called PHA.
1111
00:49:38,905 --> 00:49:40,871
{\an8}POGUE:
PHAs...
1112
00:49:40,905 --> 00:49:43,738
{\an7}polyhydroxyalkanoates...
1113
00:49:43,771 --> 00:49:47,138
{\an7}are a type of plastic produced
from polymers harvested
1114
00:49:47,171 --> 00:49:49,271
{\an1}from certain bacteria.
1115
00:49:49,305 --> 00:49:51,838
{\an1}For the bacteria,
1116
00:49:51,871 --> 00:49:54,238
{\an1}the polymers are essentially
kind of like fat,
1117
00:49:54,271 --> 00:49:55,905
{\an1}a way to store energy.
1118
00:49:55,938 --> 00:49:58,538
{\an1}But, because they come
from bacteria,
1119
00:49:58,571 --> 00:50:01,138
{\an1}PHAs have a huge advantage.
1120
00:50:01,171 --> 00:50:04,138
{\an1}They're completely
biodegradable.
1121
00:50:04,171 --> 00:50:08,205
{\an1}Researchers in Jason's lab
are among several scientists
1122
00:50:08,238 --> 00:50:11,771
{\an1}and companies around the world
developing
1123
00:50:11,805 --> 00:50:13,838
{\an1}a PHA-based coating
that could replace
1124
00:50:13,871 --> 00:50:15,605
{\an1}the traditional plastics
1125
00:50:15,638 --> 00:50:20,505
{\an1}that often make our take-out
boxes unrecyclable.
1126
00:50:20,538 --> 00:50:22,838
{\an1}Although the cost of PHAs
still needs to come down
1127
00:50:22,871 --> 00:50:25,038
{\an1}to be competitive.
1128
00:50:25,071 --> 00:50:29,305
And finally, what does
Jason think about that
1129
00:50:29,338 --> 00:50:32,805
{\an1}eco-friendly-looking green bag
I brought breakfast in.
1130
00:50:32,838 --> 00:50:37,505
{\an7}This is a great exampleof
some absolute green washing.
1131
00:50:37,538 --> 00:50:38,905
"Biodegradable."
1132
00:50:38,938 --> 00:50:40,371
You see it in big, bold claims.
1133
00:50:40,405 --> 00:50:42,705
{\an1}If you read the fine print,
1134
00:50:42,738 --> 00:50:48,905
{\an1}it says, "49.28% biodegradation
in 900 days
1135
00:50:48,938 --> 00:50:51,405
{\an1}"under non-typical conditions.
1136
00:50:51,438 --> 00:50:54,038
{\an7}No evidence of further
biodegradation."
1137
00:50:54,071 --> 00:50:56,005
(laughing):
Come on!
1138
00:50:56,038 --> 00:50:58,238
{\an1}That sounds like a total scam.
1139
00:50:58,271 --> 00:51:01,505
{\an1}But look at the size
of the green leaves!
1140
00:51:01,538 --> 00:51:04,905
{\an1}That makes me feel good about
myself... it has a leaf on it.
1141
00:51:04,938 --> 00:51:07,638
{\an1}This is simply adding
to the confusion
1142
00:51:07,671 --> 00:51:11,571
{\an1}of people like yourself,
people in the general public,
1143
00:51:11,605 --> 00:51:13,038
{\an1}that want to do the right thing.
1144
00:51:13,071 --> 00:51:16,838
{\an1}This makes it really difficultto
know exactly what to do.
1145
00:51:16,871 --> 00:51:18,838
♪
1146
00:51:18,871 --> 00:51:20,405
POGUE:
Oh!
1147
00:51:20,438 --> 00:51:23,538
{\an1}When it comes to creating
new materials,
1148
00:51:23,571 --> 00:51:26,471
{\an1}we may be the victims
of our own success.
1149
00:51:26,505 --> 00:51:28,705
{\an1}It was like poof!
1150
00:51:28,738 --> 00:51:32,371
{\an1}We've invented some that are
useful and so durable...
1151
00:51:32,405 --> 00:51:35,871
{\an1}that they last more than
a human lifetime.
1152
00:51:35,905 --> 00:51:38,938
{\an1}And now we're drowning in them.
1153
00:51:38,971 --> 00:51:41,471
{\an1}But attitudes are changing
1154
00:51:41,505 --> 00:51:44,005
{\an1}with engineers and chemists
harnessing
1155
00:51:44,038 --> 00:51:48,038
{\an1}biology to combat the problem.
1156
00:51:48,071 --> 00:51:51,471
{\an1}In the end, the human ingenuity
that helped create
1157
00:51:51,505 --> 00:51:53,571
{\an1}the current crisis
1158
00:51:53,605 --> 00:51:57,405
{\an1}may help solve it as well.
1159
00:51:57,438 --> 00:52:04,305
{\an1}The only thing between me and
certain death is chemistry?
1160
00:52:04,338 --> 00:52:06,271
♪
1161
00:52:06,305 --> 00:52:09,738
As we move
"Beyond The Elements."
1162
00:52:09,771 --> 00:52:14,305
♪
1163
00:52:32,171 --> 00:52:37,805
{\an8}♪
1164
00:52:48,071 --> 00:52:52,305
{\an7}To order this program on DVD,
visit ShopPBS
1165
00:52:52,338 --> 00:52:55,571
{\an7}or call 1-800-PLAY-PBS.
1166
00:52:55,605 --> 00:52:58,305
{\an7}Episodes of "NOVA" are available
with Passport.
1167
00:52:58,338 --> 00:53:01,905
{\an7}"NOVA" is also available
on Amazon Prime Video.
1168
00:53:01,938 --> 00:53:07,038
{\an8}♪
90764
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