Saturday, November 22, 2025

Sunday's THOUGHTFUL Post : The most underrated danger of 2025: things we still think are harmless.

Sunday's THOUGHTFUL Post

The most underrated danger of 2025: things we still think are harmless.


Bans don’t happen because something becomes dangerous.

They happen because we finally measure the damage.

The data is always late to the party.


Every generation’s miracle becomes the next generation’s cautionary tale.


“Forever chemicals” replaced asbestos.

“Natural supplements” replaced regulated medicine.

“Synthetic dopamine” in social feeds is just the new nicotine.


The pattern never changes.


We normalize first, regulate later, and realize too late that our “everyday habits” were quiet experiments in public health.


If history teaches anything, it’s that what feels harmless today is usually what blinds us tomorrow.


That’s why lists like this matter: not for nostalgia, but for foresight.


🕰️ 10 Things That Were Once Legal

1️⃣ Cocaine in cough syrup

2️⃣ Lead in gasoline

3️⃣ Asbestos insulation

4️⃣ Radium face cream

5️⃣ Thalidomide during pregnancy

6️⃣ Bloodletting for fever

7️⃣ Smoking on airplanes

8️⃣ DDT pesticide on playgrounds

9️⃣ Mercury in thermometers and fillings

🔟 Lobotomy as therapy


15 “Harmless” Things That Might One Day Be Illegal- Med Edition, BuzzFeed Inspired

1️⃣ Kids using social media

(Linked to anxiety, depression, and rewired brain reward circuits in teens.)


2️⃣ Unregulated AI in healthcare

(Deepfakes, biased algorithms, and chatbots replacing clinicians without oversight.)


3️⃣ Unpaid medical or research internships

(Exploiting early-career professionals under the guise of “experience.”)


4️⃣ Tanning beds

(A controlled-dose carcinogen already banned in Australia.)


5️⃣ Direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical ads

(Driving overprescription and medical self-diagnosis.)


6️⃣ Predatory student loan interest for healthcare training

(Trapping medical and nursing students in decades-long debt.)


7️⃣ Five-day hospital and clinic work weeks

(When 12-hour shifts already cause burnout and clinical errors.)


8️⃣ Factory farming

(Source of zoonotic disease, antibiotic resistance, and endocrine disruptors.)


9️⃣ The supplement industry’s lack of regulation

(A massive market built on minimal evidence and frequent contamination.)


🔟 Private equity owning hospitals

(Driving patient harm and cost-cutting disguised as efficiency.)


1️⃣1️⃣ Separating dental, eye, and medical insurance

(When oral and ocular disease are proven systemic indicators.)


1️⃣2️⃣ Disposable “fast fashion” materials

(Shedding microplastics now found in lungs, placentas, and blood.)


1️⃣3️⃣ Data-harvesting health apps

(Selling biometric data without consent or long-term transparency.)


What do you think we’ll look back on and say,

“How did we ever think that was okay?”

Activat


source : Olga R

Exel to integrate Polynt’s bio-based monomers into its composite solutions

Exel Composites, a global technology company that designs and manufactures composite solutions, has partnered with Polynt, a leading global producer of specialties for industrial, transportation, building and construction markets, to integrate bio-based monomers into its composite solutions. This collaboration aims to develop more sustainable composite materials with a reduced carbon footprint.


Exel has entered into a new purchasing agreement with global resin specialist Polynt to purchase hundreds of tonnes of its bio-based unsaturated polyester resin (UPR). The collaboration represents another significant step in Exel’s transition towards lower-carbon composites manufacturing, with the resin available for European customers’ orders now. 

The resin, developed by Polynt, contains about 20% bio-based content thanks to the introduction of a renewable monomer. The Italian producer sources this monomer from second- and third-generation biomass; feedstocks that do not compete with food crops. This sustainable material offers a drop-in replacement for traditional fossil-based resins, ensuring full compatibility with Exel’s existing pultrusion processes. 

Compared with conventional UPR, independent lifecycle analyses (LCAs) show that the bio-based formulation delivers a 20% reduction in carbon footprint according to Ecoinvent v3.11. Polynt sources the monomer in Europe and produces most of the raw materials in its Italian plants. The resin is produced in Polynt’s production facilities in Poland and France, and will be used in Exel’s European plants. This ensures minimal transportation-related emissions throughout the entire supply chain. 

“Our internal testing shows no measurable difference in performance between this bio-based resin and the fossil-based equivalent.


Exel and Polynt share a similar global footprint, with multiple production sites across the world. This regionalised structure allows both companies to supply customers locally, reducing delivery times and logistics-related emissions. 


Polynt is committed to helping customers like Exel reduce their environmental impact through practical, scalable solutions. Introducing bio-based building blocks into high-volume resin systems is one of the most effective ways to move our industry toward lower emissions.” 

Exel’s customers will have the choice of adopting this resin as part of their product specification. By working with long-term partners such as Polynt, Exel continues to advance sustainable manufacturing in composites. For contractors bidding for tenders, lower-carbon materials can be an excellent way to increase their proposal’s appeal.


source: Jeccomposites/Exel Composites

Hallink Moulds highlights labelless bottle, 3D printed molds

 Hallink Moulds Inc., a Cambridge, Ontario-based division of Big 3 Precision Products, is showcasing two new developments: a labelless bottle project and a new approach to 3D printed molds.

For the labelless bottle, Hallink created a mold with enhanced venting technology that allows detailed lettering to appear directly on the bottle surface. The project was developed for the Panamanian market and is now in commercial use for a spring water brand.



“It’s totally legible as far as all the different information, nutritional facts and so forth,” said Jason Warmington, general manager at Hallink. “It’s basically venting in the font. The design was done in Peru, but it was the technology and the mold that allowed the letters to be fully vented and show that detail.”


Warmington said the client had worked with Hallink in the past and returned with the challenge of producing a mold that could handle intricate lettering. Traditional pin-venting methods would have required too many holes, potentially compromising mold strength. Hallink’s new venting approach allowed venting for each individual letter, improving clarity and durability.


“We’ve done some experiments in the past where it wasn’t legible enough for certain markets,” Warmington said. “With this new technology, we could go back and improve on what we had done before.”

The company is also advancing its work with 3D printed molds. Hallink traditionally uses aluminum molds, but cost and lead times can be a barrier for customers. Its new system uses liquid 3D printing with specific materials, enabling molds to be printed overnight and shipped quickly.

While Hallink has worked with 3D printing for years, the ability to create one-off sample molds is a newer development. The focus is on reducing time to market and providing customers with more affordable options.


“Instead of doing a costly aluminum mold or a production mold that might cost $10,000, this option allows you to make a mold for $1,000 to $2,000,” Warmington said. “Whereas a lead cavity might take a week, with this printing technology we can do it in a day.


Hallink is still testing different materials to improve the durability of sample molds, but Warmington emphasized the purpose is not for production molds. Instead, the printed molds give customers a fast turnaround to see samples and validate designs before committing to full-scale production.


source : Plastics News

Friday, November 21, 2025

Audi unveils the R26 Concept and prepares for its arrival in Formula One

For Audi, entering F1 forms part of a wider strategic project. The manufacturer has revealed its new vehicle concept, the R26 Concept, which introduces a strong identity to support an ambitious programme built around a new-generation hybrid power unit and full integration between chassis and engine. This decision comes at a time when new engine and hybrid regulations are due to take effect from 2026, bringing increased electrification, sustainable fuels and broader technological change.


With a global audience that continues to grow and a more stable economic framework, Audi sees Formula One as a key technological and marketing platform.


Composite materials, a technical foundation

#FormulaOne has long been a cutting-edge laboratory for the development and optimisation of composite materials. The future Audi single-seater will naturally be able to draw on the full range of solutions already standardised within the discipline, while simultaneously preparing new applications compatible with the demands of the 2026 regulations.


Although #Audi has not yet publicly disclosed the materials used on its car, the central structure – the monocoque – could be manufactured from polymer-matrix carbon #composites, offering an unrivalled strength-to-weight ratio and the energy-absorption capability required to pass FIA crash tests. Aerodynamic components, from the engine cover to the wings, could in turn rely on carbon prepregs optimised for mechanical stability and precise deformation control.


Areas subjected to intense thermal loads, particularly around the hybrid system and turbocharger, require high-temperature resins and advanced composites capable of withstanding extreme thermal gradients. To this must be added carbon/carbon braking systems, essential for operating reliably at temperatures exceeding 1,000°C.


source: Jeccomposites

Photos: Audi

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : New lightweight polymer film can prevent corrosion

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

New lightweight polymer film can prevent corrosion

Because it’s nearly impermeable to gases, the polymer coating developed by MIT engineers could be used to protect solar panels, machinery, infrastructure, and more.



The polymer, which can be applied as a film mere nanometers thick, completely repels nitrogen and other gases, as far as can be detected by laboratory equipment, the researchers found. That degree of impermeability has never been seen before in any polymer, and rivals the impermeability of molecularly-thin crystalline materials such as graphene.

“Our polymer is quite unusual. It’s obviously produced from a solution-phase polymerization reaction, but the product behaves like graphene, which is gas-impermeable because it’s a perfect crystal. However, when you examine this material, one would never confuse it with a perfect crystal,” says Michael Strano, the Carbon P. Dubbs Professor of Chemical Engineering at MIT.

The polymer film, which the researchers describe today in Nature, is made using a process that can be scaled up to large quantities and applied to surfaces much more easily than graphene.

Strano and Scott Bunch, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Boston University, are the senior authors of the new study. The paper’s lead authors are Cody Ritt, a former MIT postdoc who is now an assistant professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder; Michelle Quien, an MIT graduate student; and Zitang Wei, an MIT research scientist.

Bubbles that don’t collapse

Strano’s lab first reported the novel material — a two-dimensional polymer called a 2D polyaramid that self-assembles into molecular sheets using hydrogen bonds — in 2022. To create such 2D polymer sheets, which had never been done before, the researchers used a building block called melamine, which contains a ring of carbon and nitrogen atoms. Under the right conditions, these monomers can expand in two dimensions, forming nanometer-sized disks. These disks stack on top of each other, held together by hydrogen bonds between the layers, which make the structure very stable and strong.

That polymer, which the researchers call 2DPA-1, is stronger than steel but has only one-sixth the density of steel.

In their 2022 study, the researchers focused on testing the material’s strength, but they also did some preliminary studies of its gas permeability. For those studies, they created “bubbles” out of the films and filled them with gas. With most polymers, such as plastics, gas that is trapped inside will seep out through the material, causing the bubble to deflate quickly.

However, the researchers found that bubbles made of 2DPA-1 did not collapse — in fact, bubbles that they made in 2021 are still inflated. “I was quite surprised initially,” Ritt says. “The behavior of the bubbles didn’t follow what you’d expect for a typical, permeable polymer. This required us to rethink how to properly study and understand molecular transport across this new material.”  

“We set up a series of careful experiments to first prove that the material is molecularly impermeable to nitrogen,” Strano says. “It could be considered tedious work. We had to make micro-bubbles of the polymer and fill them with a pure gas like nitrogen, and then wait. We had to repeatedly check over an exceedingly long period of time that they weren’t collapsed, in order to report the record impermeability value.”

Traditional polymers allow gases through because they consist of a tangle of spaghetti-like molecules that are loosely joined together. This leaves tiny gaps between the strands. Gas molecules can seep through these gaps, which is why polymers always have at least some degree of gas permeability.

However, the new 2D polymer is essentially impermeable because of the way that the layers of disks stick to each other.

“The fact that they can pack flat means there’s no volume between the two-dimensional disks, and that’s unusual. With other polymers, there’s still space between the one-dimensional chains, so most polymer films allow at least a little bit of gas to get through,” Strano says.

George Schatz, a professor of chemistry and chemical and biological engineering at Northwestern University, described the results as “remarkable.”

“Normally polymers are reasonably permeable to gases, but the polyaramids reported in this paper are orders of magnitude less permeable to most gases under conditions with industrial relevance,” says Schatz, who was not involved in the study.

A protective coating

In addition to nitrogen, the researchers also exposed the polymer to helium, argon, oxygen, methane, and sulfur hexafluoride. They found that 2DPA-1’s permeability to those gases was at least 1/10,000 that of any other existing polymer. That makes it nearly as impermeable as graphene, which is completely impermeable to gases because of its defect-free crystalline structure.

Scientists have been working on developing graphene coatings as a barrier to prevent corrosion in solar cells and other devices. However, scaling up the creation of graphene films is difficult, in large part because they can’t be simply painted onto surfaces.

“We can only make crystal graphene in very small patches,” Strano says. “A little patch of graphene is molecularly impermeable, but it doesn’t scale. People have tried to paint it on, but graphene does not stick to itself but slides when sheared. Graphene sheets moving past each other are considered almost frictionless.”

On the other hand, the 2DPA-1 polymer sticks easily because of the strong hydrogen bonds between the layered disks. In this paper, the researchers showed that a layer just 60 nanometers thick could extend the lifetime of a perovskite crystal by weeks. Perovskites are materials that hold promise as cheap and lightweight solar cells, but they tend to break down much faster than the silicon solar panels that are now widely used.

A 60-nanometer coating extended the perovskite’s lifetime to about three weeks, but a thicker coating would offer longer protection, the researchers say. The films could also be applied to a variety of other structures.

“Using an impermeable coating such as this one, you could protect infrastructure such as bridges, buildings, rail lines — basically anything outside exposed to the elements. Automotive vehicles, aircraft and ocean vessels could also benefit. Anything that needs to be sheltered from corrosion. The shelf life of food and medications can also be extended using such materials,” Strano says.

The other application demonstrated in this paper is a nanoscale resonator — essentially a tiny drum that vibrates at a particular frequency. Larger resonators, with sizes around 1 millimeter or less, are found in cell phones, where they allow the phone to pick up the frequency bands it uses to transmit and receive signals.

“In this paper, we made the first polymer 2D resonator, which you can do with our material because it’s impermeable and quite strong, like graphene,” Strano says. “Right now, the resonators in your phone and other communications devices are large, but there’s an effort to shrink them using nanotechnology. To make them less than a micron in size would be revolutionary. Cell phones and other devices could be smaller and reduce the power expenditures needed for signal processing.”

Resonators can also be used as sensors to detect very tiny molecules, including gas molecules. 

The research was funded, in part, by the Center for Enhanced Nanofluidic Transport-Phase 2, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, as well as the National Science Foundation.

This research was carried out, in part, using MIT.nano’s facilities.

source: MIT News

Formlabs Unveils Next-Generation SLA Materials That Rival Traditional Thermoplastics

Formlabs, the leader in 3D printing, today announced two new SLA materials that bring #3Dprinting significantly closer to being a manufacturing method for end-use part production. Tough 1000 Resin and a significantly improved Tough 2000 Resin join Tough 1500 Resin, forming the new Tough Resin family. These tough, resilient engineering materials stand up to harsh environments, impact, and repeated wear, all while delivering a dark, matte surface finish with crisp details when printed on Form 4 Series 3D printers.






Thermoplastics are strong, durable, and long-lasting, and the next-generation Formlabs Tough Resins rival these materials. Each of the resins in the Tough Resin family are named after the tensile modulus of the material and match properties of specific benchmark thermoplastics:

Tough 1000 Resin is the toughest and most ductile material in the new Tough family, rivaling HDPE.

Tough 1500 Resin is a balanced blend of stiffness and compliance, rivaling polypropylene. 

Tough 2000 Resin is the strongest and stiffest, rivaling ABS. 


#Formlabs’ goal has always been to deliver any part at the push of a button,” Formlabs co-founder and CEO Max Lobovsky said. “But that mission depends on more than just speed and ease. We need parts that are as tough and resilient as the products we rely on every day. With the new Tough Resin family, SLA printing now delivers the strength and durability of the world’s most trusted thermoplastics.


Early users have already seen how well parts printed in the new Tough materials hold up in real-world applications.

“The end-use products that we are offering, they need to be able to withstand our torture testing at freezing temperatures. These parts need to be able to take abuse, and Tough 1000 holds up.


Blazing Fast Post-Curing of Large Parts With Form Cure L V2:

Formlabs also introduced Form Cure L V2, a new large-format curing unit compatible with all parts printed on large format #SLAprinters like the Form 4L. It post-cures most parts in under 60 seconds, offering a faster, more compact, and streamlined post-processing experience.

This streamlined post-processing workflow has already helped customers iterate more quickly and dramatically increase throughput. 

“We were shocked by how fast the cure times were across all materials, even the engineering resins, which allowed us to work faster and get finished parts to our engineers in less time.


New PreForm Features Streamline Workflows:

PreForm 3.54 introduces new software features for both the Form Series 3D printers and Fuse Series 3D printers, making workflows faster, easier, and more streamlined. New features include: 

Supports V2

Measuring Tools

CAD assembly import improvements

Improved build packing tools

UX and navigation improvements 

With these updates, users can focus more on design and problem-solving, not supports, imports, or packing.


source: Formlabs


Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : We Cracked the Code: From Forever Waste to Circular Fibres

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share We Cracked the Code: From Forever Waste to Circular Fibres 90% fibre recovery. Safety standards exceeded. CO₂ em...