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Nanotechnology
shows promise as next wrinkle fighter
Jan. 15, 2007
The next big idea in
preventing wrinkles is very, very small. Nano small.
A Michigan State University
chemical engineer has discovered that nanoparticles can stop thin
polymer films from buckling and wrinkling. It’s a new
solution to a critical problem as thin films become more
important in new technology such as electronic monitors.
The cosmetic arsenal to fight
human wrinkles embraces technologies that seems crossed with
science fiction – from microdermabrasians to lasers to
Botox injections – and nanoparticles are poised to join the
war by warding off dreaded buckles in human skin.
Ilsoon Lee, an assistant
professor of chemical engineering, along with Ph.D. student Troy
Hendricks, published an online article in the American Chemical
Society’s Nano Letters in December 2006 that outlines the
potential of using infinitesimally small nanoparticles –
50nm – between films to smooth out the tiny buckles that
are the origin of wrinkles.
While the article addresses
breakthroughs in the buckling of polymer films as they were
compressed or heated during the manufacturing process, Ilsoon
said the principles show promise to apply to human skin.
The research is supported by
the National Science Foundation and the Michigan Economic
Development Corp.
On all fronts, it’s all
about nailing a wrinkle before it starts.
“Everything starts at a
really small scale, so if we can prevent the buckling at the very
beginning – at the nano level – we can eliminate
large scale wrinkles,” Ilsoon said. “Wrinkles can
initiate from the small scale, and when it grows we cannot remove
it.”
Nanoparticles already have
entered the cosmetic marketplace because they can penetrate
deeper into the skin, transporting vitamins and other compounds
to plump and smooth tissue. But Ilsoon envisions thin films that
can be injected beneath the thinning outer layer of the skin, the
epidermis, that over time stiffens and buckles with aging, and
the thicker dermis beneath it, which remains more pliable over
time. Think of a raisin.
Ilsoon explained that
nanoparticles spread in a thin film can break up the compressive
forces on a plane and redirect them. Once the force is reduced
below the critical buckling strain, the film will not buckle. No
buckles, no wrinkles. The nanoparticles in the film can be stress
busters without affecting the neighboring layers.
“The wrinkle-free films
will automatically absorb or deflect the stress and stay flat,
just as they are after formation,” he said.
Nanoparticle films wouldn’t
be a face-lift itself, but Ilsoon sees the possibility in a film
that could be added during a cosmetic procedure – such as
an eyelift – to stabilize the improvements and prevent
further wrinkling. He also sees applications in medical
procedures – such as artificial skins for surgery.
The ideas are in the early
stages with health and safety concerns to be worked through.
Already Ilsoon’s lab, with collaborators, is testing
polymer films, by applying various cells and proteins to see if
there are toxic reactions.
Source
/ Credit: Michigan State University
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