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Why doesn’t anything stick to Teflon? - Ashwini Bharathula

  • 0:09 - 0:11
    Nothing stuck to Mafia boss John Gotti
  • 0:11 - 0:16
    who evaded justice for years by bribing
    and threatening jurors and witnesses.
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    That earned him the name
    the Teflon Don
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    after one of the slipperiest
    materials on Earth.
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    Teflon was in the spacesuits the Apollo
    crew wore for the moon landing,
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    in pipes and valves used
    in the Manhattan Project,
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    and maybe in your kitchen as the nonstick
    coating on frying pans and cookie sheets.
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    So what is this slippery solid
    and why doesn't anything stick to it?
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    Teflon is a brand name for
    polytetrafluoroethylene,
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    or PTFE.
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    It was stumbled upon accidentally in 1938
    by a 27-year-old American chemist
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    named Roy Plunkett
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    while he was trying to develop
    a non-toxic refrigerant fluid for DuPont,
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    a chemicals company.
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    The strange, white substance that formed
    inside his lab canister
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    was chemically inert,
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    meaning it wouldn't react
    with other substances.
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    It also had an extremely
    low coefficient of friction,
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    making other materials slide right off it.
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    Teflon's properties make it perfect
    when you need something slippery,
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    chemical resistant,
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    or waterproof,
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    which means it has a lot of applications.
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    It can be found all over the place,
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    as a coating on raincoats,
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    industrial ball bearings,
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    artificial joints,
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    circuit boards,
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    and even the Rocky Mountains-themed roof
    of the Denver International Airport.
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    The incredible properties of PTFE
    come from its molecular structure.
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    It's a polymer,
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    meaning it's made of long chains of
    repeating units of atoms strung together.
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    A PTFE chain has a backbone
    of carbon atoms,
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    each of which is attached
    to two fluorines.
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    The fluorine atoms surround the carbon
    like armor,
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    spiraling around the chain,
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    and the bond between carbon and fluorine
    is incredibly tight.
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    Like a couple that ignores everyone
    except each other,
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    carbon and fluorine interact so strongly
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    that the normal, intermolecular forces
    that help substances stick to each other
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    don't stand a chance.
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    Even the famously adhesive feet of geckos
    usually can't get a grip.
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    But wait.
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    If PTFE doesn't stick to anything,
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    how can it be so firmly attached
    to something like a pan?
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    One method involves sandblasting the pan
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    or etching it with chemicals
    to make it rough.
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    Then, a special primer is applied,
    which acts like glue.
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    Its exact composition is a trade secret
    guarded by each manufacturer.
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    The pan is sprayed with liquid PTFE
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    and heated to around
    800 degrees Fahrenheit.
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    The layers then solidify into
    a smooth, slick coating.
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    When you later cook eggs
    in this PTFE-coated pan,
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    the extra tight carbon-fluorine bonds
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    just ignore the water and fat and protein
    molecules in the eggs.
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    Without those interactions,
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    the food just slides around
    without sticking.
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    You might wonder if it's safe to cook
    in a PTFE-coated pan.
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    The answer is yes, if you're careful.
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    PTFE is stable at moderate temperatures,
    like you'd use to cook eggs or fish,
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    but above 500 degrees Fahrenheit,
    it starts to degrade,
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    and heating it further releases fumes
    that can make you feel sick.
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    An empty pan can reach 500 degrees fast
    over high heat,
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    but most kitchens are ventilated
    well enough to dissipate the fumes.
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    People used to also think
    that accidentally consuming PTFE
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    that flaked off a scratched pan
    was bad for you,
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    but the current consensus
    is that it's harmless.
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    Because PTFE doesn't interact with other
    chemicals very well,
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    it isn't thought to break down
    inside your body.
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    Whether it's safe to manufacture Teflon
    is another story.
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    DuPont and its spin-off company Chemours
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    now face lawsuits
    worth millions of dollars.
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    They've been accused of polluting
    the environment for decades
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    and exposing employees
    and local communities
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    to health risks associated
    with a toxic chemical called PFOA.
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    That chemical was involved
    in manufacturing Teflon.
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    As for John Gotti,
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    in 1992, the Mob boss was finally
    convicted of five counts of murder,
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    among other charges.
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    That prompted the head of the FBI office
    in New York city to announce
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    the Teflon is gone.
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    The Don is covered in velcro
    and all the charges stuck.
Title:
Why doesn’t anything stick to Teflon? - Ashwini Bharathula
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:45

English subtitles

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