Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Get Even The Last Drop Out From Shampoo Bottle Soon

Darpan News Desk IANS, 27 Jun, 2016 01:32 PM
    Ever struggled with a shampoo bottle in trying to get the last drop out or the last bit of a hand wash, dish wash or laundry detergent? Worry not as researchers, including one of Indian-origin, have found a way to create the perfect texture inside plastic bottles to let soap products flow out freely.
     
    The new technology involves lining a plastic bottle with microscopic "y-shaped" structures that cradle the droplets of soap aloft above tiny air pockets so that the soap never actually touches the inside of the bottle.
     
    "Manufacturers are really interested in this because they make billions of bottles that end up in the garbage with product still in them," said Bharat Bhushan, Professor from Ohio State University.
     
    The "y" structures are built up using spray-coating a small amount of solvent and ultra-fine silica nanoparticles onto the inside of bottles.
     
    Mixing the silica and solvent to the surface of the polypropylene -- the common plastics used to package foodstuffs and household goods -- softened it just enough, so that when the plastic re-hardened, the silica got embedded in the surface.
     
    The structures are only a few micrometers -- millionths of a meter-high -- and covered in even smaller branchlike projections.
     
    The main branches of the "y" overhang the plastic surface at an angle less than 90 degrees -- steep enough that water, oils and even surfactant can't physically sustain a droplet shape that would fall in between the branches and touch the plastic.
     
    Surfactants -- the organic molecules that make soap "soapy"-- have a very low surface tension and stick to plastic easily.
     
    "It was an extra challenge for us to make a surface that could repel surfactant as the plastic bottles end up with air pockets underneath that gives them a liquid repellency," explained Philip Brown, post-doctoral Student at Ohio State.
     
    But, "we embedded a hard material directly into the polymer surface, so we know it's durable," Brown added in a paper published in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society.
     
    The researchers further hope to license the coating technique to manufacturers -- not just for shampoo bottles, but for other plastic products that have to stay clean, such as biomedical devices or catheters. 

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Poor maths behind fewer female economists: Study

    Poor maths behind fewer female economists: Study
    Less than half as many girls as boys apply to study economics at the university, while only 10 percent of females enrol at university with an...

    Poor maths behind fewer female economists: Study

    Israelis ready to dump family, sex for internet: Poll

    Israelis ready to dump family, sex for internet: Poll
    A Google poll revealed that many Israeli people are willing to sacrifice sex and stop talking to their mothers for the sake of internet surfing....

    Israelis ready to dump family, sex for internet: Poll

    People shun swimming due to high entry fee

    People shun swimming due to high entry fee
    Faced with higher prices, more people are likely to drop swimming than gym workouts, finds a fascinating study....

    People shun swimming due to high entry fee

    Chimpanzees plan their breakfast time

    Chimpanzees plan their breakfast time
    Wild chimpanzees flexibly plan when and where they will have breakfast after weighing multiple factors, such as the time of day and the type of food to be eaten, research shows....

    Chimpanzees plan their breakfast time

    Future-focused women fight climate change better

    Future-focused women fight climate change better
    “They are more politically liberal and liberals are more likely to value the environment which makes them more likely to believe in global...

    Future-focused women fight climate change better

    Sleeping with more women reduces prostate cancer risk: Study

    Sleeping with more women reduces prostate cancer risk: Study
    As compared to men who have had only one partner during their lifetime, having sex with more than 20 women is associated with a 28...

    Sleeping with more women reduces prostate cancer risk: Study