| Trials have been conducted towards products that help keep toilets that smell nice and stay clean at all times. A Coventry University spin-out company Exilica specialising in particle technology has joined forces with another SME to explore the potential of a pioneering new product. Exilica has developed and patented a unique technology which allows long-lasting fragrances to be manufactured into a variety of plastics and other polymer-based materials. The company recently collaborated with Birmingham-based Barkley Plastics and fragrance firm Seven Scent to create a scented floor tile, and has launched a trial run of the product in toilets on Coventry University’s campus. Using Exilica’s micro-particle technology, the floor tiles have been loaded with both a fragrance and an anti-bacterial agent, ensuring the toilets smell nice and stay clean at all times. The particles developed by  Exilica are tiny spheres which act like microscopic sponges, capable of  absorbing twice their own weight in a variety of other substances - including  scents - and then discharging them via a slow release chemical mechanism for  several years. What is unique about the technology is the particles’ ability to  blend seamlessly into any polymer-based material without affecting that  material’s properties, potentially opening the door to revolutionary  applications in industries such as healthcare, cosmetics and manufacturing. These spherical  particles are produced from poly (1-methylpyrrol-2-ylsquaraine) or PMPS, which  was discovered in 1966 but overlooked as it was a black intractable powder. In  2005 a scanning electron microscope (SEM) image of PMPS particles was published  revealing that they were uniform spheres with a diameter of 1.3 µm. Later  research found that the spheres vary in size up to a diameter of 4 µm, with the  diameter range peaking around 1.9 µm. These particles are insoluble, do not  melt when heated in air and decompose, although this decomposition doesn’t  really affect the structural integrity of the parti cles until over 300°C. The  PMPS particles developed by Exilica act like micro sponges and can absorb every  metal of the periodic table, as well as other small organics such as fragrances  and organic anti-bacterials. “They are the right size and shape, and are robust  enough, to be compounded into polymers,” explains Technical Director Daniel  Lynch. “They can be used as a delivery vehicle to carry chemical actively into  polymer, or rubber, matrices.” The particles are solid but consist of an  internal porous network with unique chemical properties that not only allows  them to absorb at least twice their own body weight in fragrance formulation  but also aids dispersion of the fragrance throughout the polymer mass. This,  combined with their resistance to high processing temperatures with minimal  weight loss, makes them well suited to carrying complex fragrances. | 
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