, with a single conical window of PMMA set into sphere hull. The very small black circle (smaller than the man's head) is the inner side of the plastic "window", only a few inches in diameter. The larger circular clear black area represents the larger outer side of the thick one-piece plastic cone "window". Being transparent and durable, PMMA is a versatile material and has been used in a wide range of fields and applications such as rear-lights and instrument clusters for vehicles, appliances, and lenses for glasses. PMMA in the form of sheets affords to shatter resistant panels for building windows, skylights, bulletproof security barriers, signs and displays, sanitary ware (bathtubs), LCD screens, furniture and many other applications. It is also used for coating polymers based on MMA provides outstanding stability against environmental conditions with reduced emission of VOC. Methacrylate polymers are used extensively in medical and dental applications where purity and stability are critical to performance. • Spectator protection in
ice hockey rinks is made from PMMA. • Historically, PMMA was an important improvement in the design of aircraft windows, making possible such designs as the bombardier's transparent nose compartment in the
Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress. Modern aircraft transparencies often use stretched acrylic plies. • Police vehicles for
riot control often have the regular glass replaced with PMMA to protect the occupants from thrown objects. • PMMA is an important material in the making of certain lighthouse lenses. • PMMA was used for the roofing of the compound in the
Olympic Park for the
1972 Summer Olympics in Munich. It enabled a light and translucent construction of the structure. • PMMA (under the brand name "Lucite") was used for the ceiling of the
Houston Astrodome.
Daylight redirection • Laser-cut acrylic panels have been used to redirect sunlight into a
light pipe or tubular skylight and, from there, to spread it into a room. Their developers Veronica Garcia Hansen,
Ken Yeang, and Ian Edmonds were awarded the
Far East Economic Review Innovation Award in bronze for this technology in 2003. • Attenuation being quite strong for distances over one meter (more than 90% intensity loss for a 3000 K source), acrylic broadband light guides are then dedicated mostly to decorative uses. • Pairs of acrylic sheets with a layer of microreplicated prisms between the sheets can have reflective and refractive properties that let them redirect part of incoming sunlight in dependence on its
angle of incidence. Such panels act as miniature
light shelves. Such panels have been commercialized for purposes of
daylighting, to be used as a
window or a
canopy such that sunlight descending from the sky is directed to the ceiling or into the room rather than to the floor. This can lead to a higher illumination of the back part of a room, in particular when combined with a white ceiling, while having a slight impact on the view to the outside compared to normal glazing.
Medicine • PMMA has a good degree of compatibility with human
tissue, and it is used in the manufacture of rigid
intraocular lenses which are implanted in the
eye when the original lens has been removed in the treatment of
cataracts. This compatibility was discovered by the English ophthalmologist
Harold Ridley in WWII RAF pilots, whose eyes had been riddled with PMMA splinters coming from the side windows of their Supermarine
Spitfire fighters the plastic scarcely caused any rejection, compared to glass splinters coming from aircraft such as the
Hawker Hurricane. Ridley had a lens manufactured by the Rayner company (Brighton & Hove, East Sussex) made from Perspex polymerised by ICI. On 29 November 1949 at St Thomas' Hospital, London, Ridley implanted the first intraocular lens. In particular, acrylic-type lenses are useful for cataract surgery in patients that have recurrent ocular inflammation (uveitis), as acrylic material induces less inflammation. •
Eyeglass lenses are commonly made from PMMA. • Historically, hard
contact lenses were frequently made of this material. Soft contact lenses are often made of a related polymer, where acrylate monomers containing one or more
hydroxyl groups make them
hydrophilic. • In
orthopedic surgery, PMMA
bone cement is used to affix implants and to remodel lost bone. It is supplied as a powder with liquid methyl methacrylate (MMA). Although PMMA is biologically compatible, MMA is considered to be an irritant and a possible
carcinogen. PMMA has also been linked to
cardiopulmonary events in the operating room due to
hypotension. Bone cement acts like a
grout and not so much like a glue in
arthroplasty. Although sticky, it does not bond to either the bone or the implant; rather, it primarily fills the spaces between the prosthesis and the bone preventing motion. A disadvantage of this bone cement is that it heats up to while setting that may cause thermal necrosis of neighboring tissue. A careful balance of initiators and monomers is needed to reduce the rate of polymerization, and thus the heat generated. • In
cosmetic surgery, tiny PMMA microspheres suspended in some biological fluid are injected as a soft-tissue filler under the skin to reduce wrinkles or scars permanently. PMMA as a soft-tissue filler was widely used in the beginning of the century to restore volume in patients with HIV-related facial wasting. PMMA is used illegally to shape muscles by some
bodybuilders. •
Plombage is an outdated treatment of
tuberculosis where the
pleural space around an infected
lung was filled with PMMA balls, in order to compress and collapse the affected lung. • Emerging biotechnology and
biomedical research use PMMA to create
microfluidic lab-on-a-chip devices, which require 100 micrometre-wide geometries for routing liquids. These small geometries are amenable to using PMMA in a
biochip fabrication process and offers moderate
biocompatibility. •
Bioprocess chromatography columns use cast acrylic tubes as an alternative to glass and stainless steel. These are pressure rated and satisfy stringent requirements of materials for
biocompatibility, toxicity, and extractables.
Dentistry Due to its aforementioned biocompatibility, poly(methyl methacrylate) is a commonly used material in modern dentistry, particularly in the fabrication of dental prosthetics, artificial teeth, and orthodontic appliances. • Acrylic prosthetic construction: Pre-polymerized, powdered PMMA spheres are mixed with a Methyl Methacrylate liquid monomer, Benzoyl Peroxide (initiator), and NN-Dimethyl-P-Toluidine (accelerator), and placed under heat and pressure to produce a hardened polymerized PMMA structure. Through the use of injection molding techniques, wax based designs with artificial teeth set in predetermined positions built on gypsum stone models of patients' mouths can be converted into functional prosthetics used to replace missing dentition. PMMA polymer and methyl methacrylate monomer mix is then injected into a flask containing a gypsum mold of the previously designed prosthesis, and placed under heat to initiate polymerization process. Pressure is used during the curing process to minimize polymerization shrinkage, ensuring an accurate fit of the prosthesis. Though other methods of polymerizing PMMA for prosthetic fabrication exist, such as chemical and microwave resin activation, the previously described heat-activated resin polymerization technique is the most commonly used due to its cost effectiveness and minimal polymerization shrinkage. • Artificial teeth: While denture teeth can be made of several different materials, PMMA is a material of choice for the manufacturing of artificial teeth used in dental prosthetics. Mechanical properties of the material allow for heightened control of aesthetics, easy surface adjustments, decreased risk of fracture when in function in the oral cavity, and minimal wear against opposing teeth. Additionally, since the bases of dental prosthetics are often constructed using PMMA, adherence of PMMA denture teeth to PMMA denture bases is unparalleled, leading to the construction of a strong and durable prosthetic.
Art and aesthetics sculpture made out of Perspex acrylic grand piano •
Acrylic paint essentially consists of PMMA suspended in water; however since PMMA is
hydrophobic, a substance with both hydrophobic and hydrophilic groups needs to be added to facilitate the
suspension. • Modern
furniture makers, especially in the 1960s and 1970s, seeking to give their products a space age aesthetic, incorporated Lucite and other PMMA products into their designs, especially office chairs. Many other products (for example, guitars) are sometimes made with acrylic glass to make the commonly opaque objects translucent. • Perspex has been used as a surface to paint on, for example by
Salvador Dalí. •
Diasec is a process which uses acrylic glass as a substitute for normal glass in
picture frames. This is done for its relatively low cost, light weight, shatter-resistance, aesthetics and because it can be ordered in larger sizes than standard
picture framing glass. • As early as 1939, Los Angeles-based Dutch sculptor
Jan de Swart experimented with samples of Lucite sent to him by DuPont; De Swart created tools to work the Lucite for sculpture and mixed chemicals to bring about certain effects of color and refraction. • From approximately the 1960s onward, sculptors and glass artists such as
Jan Kubíček,
Leroy Lamis, and
Frederick Hart began using acrylics, especially taking advantage of the material's flexibility, light weight, cost and its capacity to refract and filter light. • In the 1950s and 1960s, Lucite was an extremely popular material for jewelry, with several companies specialized in creating high-quality pieces from this material. Lucite beads and ornaments are still sold by jewelry suppliers. • Acrylic sheets are produced in dozens of standard colors, most commonly sold using color numbers developed by Rohm & Haas in the 1950s. chemical sample used for teaching. The glass sample vial of the corrosive and poisonous liquid has been cast into an acrylic plastic cube
Methyl methacrylate "
synthetic resin" for casting (simply the bulk liquid chemical) may be used in conjunction with a polymerization catalyst such as
methyl ethyl ketone peroxide (MEKP), to produce hardened transparent PMMA in any shape, from a mold. Objects like insects or coins, or even dangerous chemicals in breakable quartz ampules, may be embedded in such "cast" blocks, for display and safe handling.
Other uses made of Lucite made from poly(methyl methacrylate) house in
Warrington, New Zealand, which incorporates polyester, polyurethane, and poly(methylmethacrylate) derived plastics. • PMMA, in the commercial form Technovit 7200 is used vastly in the medical field. It is used for plastic histology, electron microscopy, as well as many more uses. • PMMA has been used to create ultra-white opaque membranes that are flexible and switch appearance to transparent when wet. • Acrylic is used in tanning beds as the transparent surface that separates the occupant from the tanning bulbs while tanning. The type of acrylic used in tanning beds is most often formulated from a special type of polymethyl methacrylate, a compound that allows the passage of ultraviolet rays. • Sheets of PMMA are commonly used in the sign industry to make flat cut out letters in thicknesses typically varying from . These letters may be used alone to represent a company's name and/or logo, or they may be a component of illuminated channel letters. Acrylic is also used extensively throughout the sign industry as a component of wall signs where it may be a backplate, painted on the surface or the backside, a faceplate with additional raised lettering or even photographic images printed directly to it, or a spacer to separate sign components. • PMMA was used in
Laserdisc optical media. (
CDs and
DVDs use both acrylic and polycarbonate for impact resistance). • It is used as a light guide for the backlights in
TFT-LCDs. •
Plastic optical fiber used for short-distance communication is made from PMMA, and perfluorinated PMMA, clad with fluorinated PMMA, in situations where its flexibility and cheaper installation costs outweigh its poor heat tolerance and higher attenuation versus glass fiber. • PMMA, in a purified form, is used as the matrix in
laser dye-doped organic solid-state gain media for tunable
solid state dye lasers. • In
semiconductor research and industry, PMMA aids as a
resist in the
electron beam lithography process. A solution consisting of the polymer in a solvent is used to
spin coat silicon and other semiconducting and semi-insulating wafers with a thin film. Patterns on this can be made by an electron beam (using an
electron microscope), deep UV light (shorter wavelength than the standard
photolithography process), or
X-rays. Exposure to these creates chain scission or (de-
cross-linking) within the PMMA, allowing for the selective removal of exposed areas by a chemical developer, making it a positive photoresist. PMMA's advantage is that it allows for extremely high resolution patterns to be made. Smooth PMMA surface can be easily nanostructured by treatment in oxygen
radio-frequency plasma and nanostructured PMMA surface can be easily smoothed by
vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) irradiation. • In the 1960s,
luthier Dan Armstrong developed a line of electric guitars and basses whose bodies were made completely of acrylic. These instruments were marketed under the
Ampeg brand.
Ibanez and
B.C. Rich have also made acrylic guitars. •
Ludwig-Musser makes a line of acrylic drums called Vistalites, well known as being used by
Led Zeppelin drummer
John Bonham. •
Artificial nails in the "acrylic" type often include PMMA powder. • Some modern briar, and occasionally meerschaum, tobacco pipes sport stems made of Lucite. • PMMA technology is utilized in roofing and waterproofing applications. By incorporating a polyester fleece sandwiched between two layers of catalyst-activated PMMA resin, a fully reinforced liquid membrane is created
in situ. • PMMA is a widely used material to create
deal toys and
financial tombstones. • PMMA is used by the
Sailor Pen Company of
Kure, Japan, in their standard models of gold-
nib fountain pens, specifically as the cap and body material. • Optical fibers made of PMMA are used by
Fiber optic drone. == See also ==