TO SOUP up your bulletproof vest, why not make it antibacterial, too? Jie Luo and Yuyu Sun of the University of South Dakota in Vermillion have done just that, using a molecule called polymethacrylamide (PMAA).
The pair dipped Kevlar fabric 鈥 used in fire-retardant clothing and bulletproof vests 鈥 in a solution of PMAA and baked it at 110 掳C. Next they washed the coated fabric in a mild bleach, where the chlorine atoms converted the ends of the PMAA molecules into N-halamines, which kill many pathogens.
The fabric retained Kevlar’s toughness and thermal properties, and killed off E. coli…



