What is more, it doesn't seem to matter how many times an area is damaged as it can be tricked into repairing itself time and time again, researches at the Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland claimed.
This breakthrough, according to them, would make the 'metallo-supramolecular polymer' a boon for motorists who have trouble parking, as well as for women who find their new shoes get scuffed within hours of using, the Daily Mail reported.
Handbags, furniture, windows, wooden floors, punctured tyres and even spectacles could all be made as good as new, sparing customers the time money and frustration involved in fixing cuts, scrapes and scuffs, the researchers said.
Lead researcher Professor Stuart Rowan said: "What we have developed is a new plastic material composed of very small chains that stick together and assemble into much larger chains.
"What we have designed into the material is the ability to disassemble on exposure to light. When it disassembles, the material flows into the crack and the system gets healed."
The 'ingenious and transformative' plastic, according to the researchers, is made up of long chains of hydrocarbons 'glued' together by tiny plugs of metal.
When UV light is shone on it, the metal generates heat and the surrounding plastic melts -- oozing
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