What's
wrong with frizzy hair anyway?
|
Humidity Makes Hair Frizzy
Why does humidity make my
hair frizz?
BY LAURIE L. DOVE
Just your luck. Ten minutes after leaving your
blowout appointment, the weather takes a turn.
Bright and sunny just minutes earlier, the skies
have taken on a grayish hue, and the air is heavy with humidity.
Your hair, which was all bounce and shine, is
beginning to wilt. Before long, the next awful stage will set in: frizz.
Blame your genes, hair products or bad luck, but
frizzy hair is the bane of your locks' existence.
When the air is humid, high levels of hydrogen
are present. (Remember, water is two parts hydrogen, one part oxygen.)
And your hair is the first to know it, a
veritable canary in the coal mine that can sense the unseen dampening forces
creeping in all around.
Turns out, the chemical makeup of human hair is
extremely sensitive to airborne hydrogen.
So sensitive, in fact, that some gadgets used to
measure humidity -- called hygrometers -- rely on hair for their
readings.
The greater the humidity, the shorter the hair
in the hygrometer becomes.
Straight hair will become wavy, wavy hair will
become curly and curly hair will become curlier. And, often, it will become
downright frizzy to boot.
So why does humidity make hair frizzy? When
hydrogen bonds form between the proteins and water molecules in your hair, it
will become curly and, potentially, frizzy.
A cross-section of an individual hair reveals
many layers.
For our purposes, we'll focus on the middle
layer of the hair, which comprises coiled bundles of keratin proteins. These
bundles are held together by chemical bonds, created either by neighboring
sulfur atoms or hydrogen atoms.
The permanent bonds of sulfur atoms aren't
affected by humidity; they help give hair its strength. The hydrogen atom bonds
give hair its temporary shape.
Every time wet hair dries, the hydrogen atoms
reform their bonds with hydrogen atoms on neighboring strands of keratin protein,
and these bonds hold until the hair is wet again.
Hydrogen bonds are responsible for the bedhead
you wake up with after falling asleep with wet hair.
Because hair is porous, it absorbs moisture when
there is humidity in the air. Hair that is overly dry from chemically based
hair treatments is particularly susceptible. (Keeping hair well moisturized can
help you avoid frizz.)
When hair absorbs moisture, a single strand of
it forms significantly more hydrogen bonds between the keratin strands it
contains.
The hair essentially doubles back in on itself
at a molecular level, absorbing water, forming bonds and swelling until it
disrupts the cuticle, which is the smooth, outermost layer of the
hair. Magnify this occurrence by an entire head of hair and the result is
frizz.
Laurie L. Dove is an award-winning journalist who covers timely topics for HowStuffWorks. She is the author of six books and the former owner of a newspaper and magazine. When not reporting on the latest tech breakthrough, health advance or economic development, Dove is tracking down hidden history, science innovations and biologic discoveries. As the Honorable Laurie Dove, Mayor, she has brought multi-million-dollar improvements to the small Midwest town where she lives with her husband, five children and two Akitas.
Laurie L. Dove is an award-winning journalist who covers timely topics for HowStuffWorks. She is the author of six books and the former owner of a newspaper and magazine. When not reporting on the latest tech breakthrough, health advance or economic development, Dove is tracking down hidden history, science innovations and biologic discoveries. As the Honorable Laurie Dove, Mayor, she has brought multi-million-dollar improvements to the small Midwest town where she lives with her husband, five children and two Akitas.
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