Hair Talk: How Ironing Wet Hair Is Like Popping Popcorns

in beauty •  7 years ago  (edited)

 Have you ever wondered what’s that popping sound you hear when you iron your wet hair? Guess what? What’s happening in your hair fibers is exactly the same as when a popcorn pops. 

 Popcorn is great movie snacks because you can finish a movie and a bagful without feeling too full. This is because popcorn consists mostly of air. Eating 1 cup of popcorn is just equivalent to eating 20 kernels of corn, thanks for its porous structure.  

Porosity is the measure of the empty spaces within a material. A popcorn has high porosity because it consists mostly of voids within the solid starch structure.  

  Before we talk about your hair, let's talk a little about popcorn and how it pops.     

How Popcorns Pop

 

Inside a single kernel is water. When a popcorn is heated, water reaches its boiling point and starts to form in to steam (steam is water in its heated, gaseous state). Gas, as we all know, always finds its way out in a confined space by pushing against the walls of whatever it is contained (in this case the kernel shell). When there is too much pressure inside the kernel, the heated steam pops its way out, destroying the kernel shell. As it ruptures, extreme heat and pressure transforms the starch inside into a gelatinous material that rapidly solidifies as it cools. And so finally, there’s your white, brain-like snack called popcorn. 

Source

Okay, now finally let’s talk about your hair

Source

When your hair is wet, water is trapped within the porous structure of your hair. A typical hair iron has a surface temperature of about 200 degrees Celsius, way above the boiling temperature of water (100 deg C). When trapped moisture is exposed to this temperature, it rapidly boils and turns in to steam. Steam then exerts pressure on the fibers of your hair, until your hair can no longer withstand and starts to break apart. The gaps or spaces that resulted from rapid vaporization of water creates a porous structure in your hair. Visualize a porous hair through this sponge.

Source

This damage worsens with repetition. The next time you wet your hair, moisture penetrates deeper through spaces created by steam from previous damage and creates new, deeper damages. This further increases the hair’s porosity. Hair with high porosity is less stronger and is less able to keep moisture in. Porous hair holds so much water when is wet so it feels soft and gummy in the shower. However as the hair dries, water can easily escape and very little moisture is retained.  Apart from water, chemicals from different hair products is easy to penetrate within porous hair. (This is also the reason why damaged hair absorbs dye more quickly compared to healthy hair).

  That’s why your hairstylist always tell you to never iron your hair wet. Damage may not be very noticeable at first, but when you do it too frequently, it will eventually result to dry and brittle hair, caused by increased hair porosity.   So the next time you’ll iron your hair wet, you should probably think about popping popcorns.   

So, have you ever tried ironing your hair wet? Thanks for taking time and until next time!
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so, u're saying girls have popcorn hair?! =p

Good thing i'm not doing it XD
Nice article @anneporter! Keep it going

Thank you so much @brokemancode

Wow. Very informative. I usually ignore it when my hair sounds awkward while I iron it. Thanks for this post! :)

Thank you @jeninamunoz I stay away from hair irons. but i still have damaged tips due to bleaching :))

Scared me. huhu. Thank you so much for the science behind the weird sounds. Very informative post! Thanks for sharing. ;)

I am sorry I scared you @reewritesthings. Ironing your hair wet once will not immediately damage it but repetition definitely does. There are products in the market that can be applied prior to ironing hair to minimize damage, just make sure its dry

Oooh. Thanks for the tip! :)

Your personality seeps through your words, @anneporter. You make science fun! I'll never look at ironed wet hair the same way again.

thank you @thegaillery . Make Science Fun - that's the plan

Wow this really is informative! i had a nice read, thanks!

Hi, this is very informative! Nicely done. I suggest if you have used references for this post, as well as for the pictures, you should include it in your post.

Hi @shairanada well noted. I made the first photo and took the last photo i used, so i did not include any source. My illustration of how popcorns pop was a concept i always knew since highschool I never forgot about how my science teacher explained it... HOW it relates to hair was just my analogy knowing how water behaves...and based on my observation of how ironing my wet hair too frequently really results to brittle and dry hair (i used to iron my hair tips). However, yes, indeed it needs improvement. I should have looked for other sources to confirm it.

Thank you very much. Your comment is well noted. Have a nice day 😊

I could never do what you did for the first pic hehe. Actually, this post is curie-worthy, I’m a little dismayed that this didn’t get much upvotes, this post deserves more. However, other studies that could support this would wrap this as a whole package of information. Thank you for considering my suggestion. I’m always happy to help kabayan. ☺️

Im definitely going to consider that on my next post, @shairanada, thank you very much. It is very helpful. See you around