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Blu Tack
Material ID: 1255
Description
In celebrating this modest and mundane material it seems we are in good company. Artist Martin Creed’s 2001 Turner Prize-winning show famously featured Work No. 79: ‘some blu tack kneaded, rolled into a ball and depressed against a wall’. If you look closely at the image on the link, you can see the imprint of Creed’s thumb in the powder blue blob. This is a reminder of how blu tack gets more liquid the more we knead and warm it, eventually becoming stringy, fibrous and fragmented ‘putty in our hands’.
So why does blu tack get blu-tackier as we handle it, and how does it stick reversibly without feeling that sticky? Structural adhesives like superglue form an irreversible bond with a surface once they have hardened. Non-reactive, pressure-sensitive adhesives on the other hand, like blu tack and the glue on the back of a post-it note, stick to surfaces when pressure or heat are applied, but can be pulled free once that force is removed. This is because they stay rigid when left to their own devices, but flow like liquids when they are pressed onto a wall or warmed up to body temperature.
In this free-flowing form, the blu tack spreads thinly and seeps into all the microscopic indents of the wall, forming a vacuum. (This is also what makes it feel stickier in your hands, as it flows into all the tiny crevices of your skin). Once a tight seal between the blu tack and wall has been formed, lots and lots of tiny but weak (electrostatic) van der Waals forces are able to hold the blu tack up. There are no strong chemical bonds holding the blu tack and wall together, but there are strong (cohesive) forces holding the blu tack molecules to each other, so it’s easily rolled off again in one piece.
Although the exact recipe for blu tack is a trade secret, we can work out roughly what’s in it: a combination of synthetic rubber compounds and mineral oil, along with mineral fillers and pigments. The mineral oil in blu tack is apparently pharmaceutical grade, according to doctors who have written accounts in medical journals of trying to remove lumps of this powder blue adhesive from a variety of bodily orifices, including the bladder and urethra (don’t ask). Because blu tack gets stringy and fragmented at body temperature, medics have taken advantage of its strange physical properties by icing the blu tack with a cold saline solution until it becomes firm enough to remove safely.
Whilst we’re on the topic of blu tack in the body, a study in the Journal of Laryngology has shown that blu tack can be used as ‘a comfortable alternative to over-the-counter earplugs for attenuating everyday sound’, and is used by people in the music business to damp vibrations from loudspeakers. Dentists have also used blu tack to create splints to immobilize and protect damaged teeth in emergency situations where no other dental equipment is available. On a day to day basis blu tack is used by scientists of every description for holding their samples in place so they can examine them: from physicists examining the elemental makeup of emeralds to ecologists who wrap flies in blu tack so that they can look at them under a microscope. Do its uses never end?
Library Details
Site
Bloomsbury
Status
In Library
Location
Glass Shelves
Form
Lump, Blob
Handling guidance
Wash hands after handling.
Date entered collection
Wednesday 24th October, 2012