Skip to content
My WebMD Sign In, Sign Up

Bad Hair Days: Hair Force Blamed

New Tool Measures 'Subtle Forces' Affecting Hair

WebMD Health News

Aug. 18, 2008 -- Blame it on the hair force.

Bad hair days grow out of interactions between individual hairs as they fly in a breeze or squish under your hat or on your pillow.

These hair-to-hair meetings result in "subtle forces" -- chemical, electrical, and mechanical energies -- that make your hair rough and unmanageable, notes Eva Max, a chemistry doctoral student at the University of Bayreuth, Germany.

Max and colleagues at BASF Care Chemicals Division aren't taking bad hair lying down. They've invented "single hair force spectroscopy," using electron microscopy to analyze nanoscale hair behavior.

"The system will allow scientists to explore how different hair-care products affect hair-to-hair interactions so that these products can be optimized in a more systematic fashion," Max says in a news release.

Despite the $60 billion spent worldwide on hair-care products, researchers still don't fully understand why hair conditioners give hair that smooth and silky feel -- and why they don't always help hair that's been tortured to force it into fashionable colors and shapes.

Using their new technique, Max and colleagues looked at hair samples from volunteers whose hair had been bleached blond. They found two reasons why hair becomes rough and unmanageable.

They found that mechanical damage to hair raises scaly projections on individual hairs. These scales jut out sideways from the hairs, creating friction as they slide past other hairs. The result: hair that's rough to the touch and hard to comb.

To cut back this problem, they say, hair products must contain ingredients that smooth out the scales.

The researchers also found that when hair fibers interact, they build up negative electrical charges. Same charges repel one another, making hair literally repulsive. Again friction results, making hair rough and hard to comb.

Rinsing out this problem will mean adding positively charged polymers to hair products to neutralize the negative charges.

But BASF scientist Claudia Wood, PhD, says it's not going to be easy to solve the bad-hair-day problem. Lots of other things contribute to hair problems, including humidity, the water content of each hair, and hair stickiness.

Max presented the findings at the American Chemical Society's 236th National Meeting, held Aug. 17-21 in Philadelphia.

Brush Up on Beauty

woman lying on sand with hair spread out
Sexy Summer Hair

Beat frizz, chlorine, and sun damage for a glorious mane.

woman with dyed blonde hair
20 Best Kept Hair Secrets

What you need to know for a beautiful mane.

woman with beautiful hair
Turn Up the Shine [En Español]

Follow step-by-step instructions for smooth, brilliant locks.

woman shampooing hair
Are You Shampooing Too Much?

Experts weigh in on the truth about shampoo and conditioner.

young woman holding hair
Don't Scorch Your Strands

4 tips to prevent hair damage.

wind
Stress and Your Hair

It might be preventing you from having the mane of your dreams.

woman with hair dryer
Help for Dry, Damaged Hair

Not sure if your hair is healthy? Try this test.

woman who quit using shampoo
Lose the Lather

Think you need to shampoo daily? Think again.

hair lock coiled around egg yolk
Eat Right for Your Hair Type

Why what goes in your mouth matters.

eyedrop
Pretty Poison?

See which products may do more harm than good.

smiling woman
Soft, Bouncy Curls

Expert product picks for touchable tendrils.

damaged hair
Rescue Dry Hair

Bring back the shine with essential oils.

URAC: Accredited Health Web Site HonCode: Health on the Net Foundation AdChoices