Harry Coover’s failed plastic experiment accidentally birthed cyanoacrylate the superglue powering modern medicine

The “mistake” glued instantly when it met moisture traces
In the late 1940s, chemist Harry Coover and colleagues sought a clear plastic, but one cyanoacrylate compound behaved “wrong,” sticking fiercely to lab surfaces instead of forming a controllable transparent polymer. Scientists later realized the flaw was a feature: the material undergoes ultra-fast polymerization on tiny traces of moisture and surface ions, creating near-instant bonds. After shifting from plastics research to adhesive development, cyanoacrylate appeared in medicine around 1958 and grew into a widely used commercial product.
- Coover’s team aimed to make a clear plastic in the late 1940s
- The compound reacted too intensely, ruining transparency expectations
- Cyanoacrylates polymerize extremely fast with minute moisture traces
- The adhesive chemistry relies on bonding triggered by moisture and ions
- Cyanoacrylates were discovered in 1949 and first used in medicine around 1958
- Today it’s used in home repairs, industry, and medical wound closures
This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on
The Economic Times
