Body Heat Triggers Shape Change in New Type of Polymer

Material can lift 1000 times its mass

Written byUniversity of Rochester
| 2 min read
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Polymers that visibly change shape when exposed to temperature changes are nothing new. But a research team led by chemical engineering professor Mitch Anthamatten at the University of Rochester created a material that undergoes a shape change that can be triggered by body heat alone, opening the door for new medical and other applications.

The material developed by Anthamatten and graduate student Yuan Meng is a type of shape-memory polymer, which can be programmed to retain a temporary shape until it is triggered—typically by heat—to return to its original shape.

Related article: New Polymer Creates Safer Fuels

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