Monday, May 21st, 2012

Spray On Glass: World’s Most Versatile Technology?

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“SiO2- ultra thin layering” is the technical term for Liquid Glass. Apart from a select group of professionals, few people in the UK know about this stunning technology. If you walk around Ataturk’s Mausoleum in Ankara you are walking on it; if you visit certain hospitals in the UK you are touching it. If you see an unusually clean train you are probably looking at it, and if you wonder how your white settee looks so clean, you may be sitting on it. All of these surfaces have been coated with invisible glass.

The flexible and breathable glass coating is approximately 100 nanometres thick (500 times thinner than a human hair), and so it is completely undetectable. It is food safe, environmentally friendly (winner of the Green Apple Award) and it can be applied to almost any surface within seconds . When coated, all surfaces become easy to clean and anti- microbially protected (Winner of the NHS Smart Solutions Award ). Houses, cars, ovens, wedding dress or any other protected surface become stain resistant and can be easily cleaned with water ; no cleaning chemicals are required. Amazingly a 30 second DIY application to a sink unit will last for a year or years, depending on how often it is used. But it does not stop there – the coatings are now also recognised as being suitable for agricultural and in-vivo application. Vines coated with SiO2 don’t suffer from mildew, and coated seeds grow more rapidly without the need for anti-fungal chemicals. This will result in farmers in enjoying massively increased yields . Trials for in-vivo applications are subject to a degree of secrecy, but Neil McClelland, the UK Project Manager for Nanopool GmbH, describes the results as “stunning”.
“Items such as stents can be coated, and this will create anti sticking features – catheters , and sutures which are a source of infection, will also cease to be problematic.”

When asked about how the technology works, Neil, said “In essence, we extract molecules of SiO2 (the primary constituent of glass) from quartz sand, and then we add the molecules to water or ethanol. Unfortunately, as they say in the movies , if I told you any more …..”. Neil comments further, “The really clever part is that there are no added nano-particles , resins or additives- the coatings form and bond due to quantum forces. Our research informs us that in all probability, we offer the most versatile coating in the world. We are happy to hear about any other technology which offers the same range of applications. Very soon almost every product that you purchase will be protected with some form of easy -to -clean coating. It just so happens that we offer something that everyone finds fascinating . The concept of spray -on glass is just mind -boggling”.
This technology is now available for domestic use in Germany. Full scale retail availability in the UK will commence in early 2010

Comments

4 Responses to “Spray On Glass: World’s Most Versatile Technology?”
  1. Caliban says:

    From the article, it appears that this product has been licensed and cleared for retail in EU/UK.
    This will mean that it will be “fast-tracked” for retail in US as well, and I would be surprised, indeed, if it was not available within 6 months. The thing we should all bear in mind is that there is money to be made here-and lots of it- so all other considerations will be ignored. Since it is almost certain that no pre-market testing has been performed regarding this product’s safety, the likelihood of anyone ever being found at fault for any(almost certain) adverse health effects are next to zero. That’s the kind of world we live in. Get used to it.

  2. Johnny says:

    If this is harmless, certain chemical cleanser companies will be completely out of business.

    This has so many applications that it would be like the Morgan Freeman “Chain Reaction” movie…we’re talking total upheaval of world economics.

    Does anyone realize how many people this will put out of work within a year or two if you need a mere fraction of the number of household and commercial cleansers, and clothing never gets stained?

    I don’t want to be a pesimist because I’m a big fan on nano-tech and have even proposed things like this in the past not exactly in detail, but similar in concept, BUT silicon dioxide actually is VERY dangerous when inhaled…yeah someone already mentioned silicosis…

    I also think it’s a terrible idea to spray crops in the field with this…maybe the trunks and branches of fruit and nut trees, but regular veggies no. Just not a good idea to eat glass.

  3. Steven says:

    I keep picturing someone (accidentally) breathing in a thin mist of this spray and over time the alveoli in the lungs getting permanently clogged up with the stuff.

    OR maybe, because Silicon is so similar to Carbon, could this stuff easily enter the blood stream through the lungs like Carbon Dioxide?

  4. ryan says:

    you eat glass all the time, since when is there no glass in your food. I too would think breathing it in is a bad idea, but then maybe quantum level effects prevent the spray from dispersing, or perhaps it isn’t a highly nebulous spray…. who knows, you haven’t used this product yet have you?

    I don’t care, where do I buy some? I’ll pay someone else $10 an hour to spray things for me.

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