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Scientific News Hypotheses Historical hypotheses DA VINCI INVENTED PLASTICS TOO
DA VINCI INVENTED PLASTICS TOO
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The many talents of Leonardo da Vinci (Image:
NASA) |
Leonardo da Vinci not only anticipated the
aeroplane, the life jacket, the intercom and the robot, he created the first
natural plastic, according to an Italian scholar.
Professor Alessandro Vezzosi, director of the Museo
Ideale in the Tuscan town of Vinci where the
artist was born, found Leonardo's recipe for artificial materials in several
pages of drawings and notes.
Vezzosi studied notes in the da Vinci's Arundel Codex (housed in the British
Library in London), Forster Codex (in London
at the Victoria
and Albert Museum), the Atlantic Codex (kept
in the Pinacoteca
Ambrosiana in Milan, Italy) and in manuscripts
in France.
By reading da Vinci's characteristic "mirror image" handwriting, which
runs from right to left, Vezzosi learned of Leonardo's plastic mixture.
"He combined colours with animal or vegetable glues, sometimes adding
organic fibres," Vezzosi said.
The Renaissance master obtained effects similar to plastic and unbreakable glass
by "clothing with colours" the leaves of cabbage, lettuce, paper and
ox tripe.
The materials he coated ranged from "the back of the stomach of a heifer or
a ox", "the leaves of wrinkle lettuce", "papers and little
canes used as goose pens" and a "large Milanese wrinkled leaf of
cabbage, which should be collected in December or January".
Vezzosi followed Leonardo's instructions and applied colours mixed with
vegetable or animal glues. He then painted the materials described by Leonardo
with many layers. As the first material dried, he removed it and obtained a
material similar to bakelite, a plastic from the early 1900s.
"You have to be patient and wait until each layer of colour dries
completely. We used pigments similar to those applied by Leonardo. They ranged
from traditional oil paint to any kind of organic materials," Vezzosi said.
The successful reproduction of Leonardo's natural polychrome plastic proved that
the Florentine genius created the first man-made plastic long before Alexander
Parkes invented parkesine (an organic material derived from cellulose) in 1862
and Leo Hendrik Baekeland's bakelite in 1909.
"Leonardo created a material somewhere between natural and chemical plastic.
Indeed, he had already synthesised a chemical very similar to acetone. But in
his experiments he always used non-toxic, organic substances," Vezzosi said.
Leonardo's polychrome mixtures were so similar to phenolic resin that they could
be used to create knife handles, salt cellars, containers and necklaces. His
monochrome mixtures could be used to create cups or vases that "once thrown
on the floor don't break".
Professor Alessandro Bagno, from the University
of Padova's department of organic chemistry,
said it was interesting that da Vinci used layers to create unbreakable objects.
"In the case of oil painting, for example, linseed oil is the binding agent.
This oil polymerises slowly on contact with the air, forming a resistant,
waterproof polymer similar to linoleum.
"This shows once again Leonardo's great innovative input, although
obviously it doesn't add anything to our knowledge nowadays."
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Online News
Publishing date: February 10, 2004
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