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Scientific American

Apr 13, 2026

Conceptual illustration of the path of a falling brick over a head covered by a helmet-like top.
Scientific Americanby Rohini Subrahmanyam·Apr 13, 2026

Bizarre ‘compleximers’ break the rules of both glass and plastic

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April 13, 20262 min read Add Us On GoogleAdd SciAmThis bizarre substance breaks the rules of both glass and plasticScientists thought glassy substances had to be either moldable or impact-resistant—but compleximers are bothBy Rohini Subrahmanyam edited by Sarah Lewin Frasier Thomas Fuchs“Compleximers”—materials that can be molded like window glass but that resist impacts like plastic does—shouldn’t exist, researchers say. Nevertheless, a few grams of one such substance sit in a laboratory at Wageningen University in the Netherlands.In Nature Communications, Wageningen physical chemist Jasper van der Gucht and his team describe what makes compleximers as meltable as glass yet as hard to break as plastic. Someday this paradoxical stuff could make it easier to fashion and fix sturdy protective gear such as helmets.Window glass, called silica, and most plastics are “glassy” materials—when they cool from their liquid states, they don’t solidify into crystals with neatly arranged atoms like water does when it freezes into ice. Instead they form an amorphous mass that feels like a solid but has randomly arranged atoms like a liquid.On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful

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