favoritearticlesinc.com favoritearticlesinc.com
   Index >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms of Use >> Add Url >> Submit Article
Search:   
Free links exchange
 
   

Drink & Food

   

Computers & Networking

   

Policies & Law

   

Property & Estate

   

Education & Learning

   

Investment & Finance

   

Health & Hygiene

   

Careers & Employment

   

Automotive

   

Self Help

   

Technology & Science

   

Art & Creative

   

Recreation & Entertainment

   

Business & Commerce

   

Lifestyle & Fashion

   

Healthcare & Medicine

   

Issues & News

   

Travel & Vacation

   

Malls & Shopping

   

Family & Home

   

Games & Play

   

Adventure & Sports

   

People & Society

   

Teens & Kids

 

Index –› Family & Home –› Interior Decoration & Design
 

A Look at the History of Memory Foam

 

Acting in the 1967 hit movie The Graduate, Walter Brooke had no idea what he was on to when he forced this nutty piece of advice on Dustin Hoffman:

Mr. McGuire: I want to say one word to you. Just one word.

Benjamin: Yes, sir.

Mr. McGuire: Are you listening?

Benjamin: Yes, I am.

Mr. McGuire: Plastics.

To Brookes sincere astonishment, plastics took the stock market by storm the very next year. The success of plastic, with uses limited only by the imagination, became one of the most important legacies of the 19th and 20th Centuries. If the Oscar-winning director Mike Nichols were ever to update his movie for a modern audience, Mr. McGuire would have two new words for Benjamin: memory foam.

Memory foam is a truly space age material. The United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration developed the first generation of memory foam in the 1970s. Memory foam behaved like a liquid and a solid at the same time. You could press your hand into the surface of the material, and when you lifted it away, you could see your handprint lingering in the material for a short while as the material slowly resumed its original flat state. The memory of your hand was strong at first, and then faded with time. Realizing the ability of this new material to both cushion and support, NASA intended to use it in the space shuttle, as a way to take the edge off the G-force impact on astronauts bodies during lift-off.

The first generation of memory foam never got off the ground. It was too brittle and tended to break down after a year or two. NASA forgot about it.

A Swedish company closely associated with the NASA memory foam project continued tinkering around with the polyurethane compound on their own and, after ten years of further research, produced a version that wouldnt break down over time. It was a spongy, gel-like plastic, whose composite open cells could deform under pressure, redistribute the air pockets to neighboring cells, and return. The next generation of memory foam had arrived.

Tempur-Pedic, now a widely known company, started marketing the material to hospitals for mattress pads to decrease bedsore cases. Patients reported that these mattress pads markedly reduced pressure on joints while lying down, while at the same time providing all the back support they needed. Riding the waves of these rave reviews in the medical world, Tempur-Pedic introduced memory foam to the general populace in the early 1990s. It was very expensive at first, but soon other companies caught wind of memory foams potential, and now there are dozens and dozens of companies producing more and more memory foam products for demanding consumers every day. Prices continue to decline.

Today, memory foam is most often used in mattresses, mattress toppers, and pillows, but the versatile material is also used in pet beds, footwear, positional sleep aids, office furniture, automobile seat padding, infant cribs and car seats, wheel chair cushions, hip pads and padded sweatpants, computer carrying cases, movie theater seating, pistol gloves, ear plugs, tennis racquet handles, and more.

What would you make with memory foam?"

Author: Eric Morris
 
Author Bio:
Eric Morris is a popular columnist. Eric likes to pen down articles about this area.
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Geology Activities-Inspiring Life-long Learning with Fun
 
Bathroom Vanity Lights: Tips Before Buying Vanity Bathroom Lights
 
Breed Profile - Labrador Retriever
 
Clever Types of Body Worn Cameras
 
How To Get Your Dog Into Search And Rescue Training
 
Starting a Playgroup on a Budget
 
Advanced Spring Cleaning
 
Introducing a New Kitten to Your Older Cat.
 
Pedestal Sink Installation Made Easy
 
Four Tips To Help You Set And Enforce Family Boundaries
 
 
 
 
 

SMUT Spelled Backwards is TUMS

SMUT is everywhere; primetime commercials, primetime TV sitcoms, radio talk shows, music lyrics and ... - Stanley Leffew
 

How Many Lights Does It Take To Change The World?

It can be easier than you think to make a difference in your home and your community. In fact, it ca ... - Stacey Moore
 

Baby Monitors Give Parents Peace Of Mind

Years ago, parents kept track of their babies by waiting for them to cry out and then checking on th ... - Anne Morris
 
 

Halloween - Cool Candy Treats

Wondering what to give those little darlings when Halloween rolls around? Hopefully this article wil ... - Michael Russell
 

Orchid Flowers Growing Tips

Orchids are beautiful flowers that have an amazing effect on people, there is a time in the year tha ... - Daniel Roshard
 
 
   Index >> Privacy >> Terms of Use
© 2008 www.favoritearticlesinc.com All Rights Reserved.