Polywater
A 1960s scientific controversy where Soviet and Western scientists claimed to have discovered a polymerized form of water with extraordinary properties, later proven to be contamination.
INVESTIGATION OVERVIEW
Polywater was a hypothesized polymerized form of water that generated intense scientific interest in the 1960s. Soviet scientist Nikolai Fedyakin reported in 1962 that water condensed in narrow quartz capillaries exhibited anomalous properties: higher viscosity, lower freezing point, and higher boiling point. Western scientists replicated the results, and the phenomenon was named 'polywater.' Hundreds of papers were published. In 1969, American scientist Denis Rousseau demonstrated that polywater was simply ordinary water contaminated with impurities from the glass and human handling. The polywater episode is now a classic case study in scientific error, confirmation bias, and the dangers of inadequate controls.
KEY CLAIMS
Water can form a stable polymerized state with different physical properties
Polywater could revolutionize materials science and chemistry
The phenomenon was suppressed by mainstream science
Polywater may have been a genuine discovery lost to contamination
The polywater controversy shows how scientific consensus can be wrong
SUPPORTING EVIDENCE
Multiple laboratories in the USSR, US, and UK reported replicating polywater's properties
The anomalous properties were consistently measured across different labs
Hundreds of papers were published in peer-reviewed journals
The phenomenon was taken seriously enough for NATO to fund research
The contamination explanation was only accepted after systematic testing
COUNTER ARGUMENTS
Rousseau's 1969 demonstration proved polywater was contaminated water
The anomalous properties were entirely explained by dissolved silica and other impurities
No theoretical basis for stable polymerized water existed
The episode is a cautionary tale about inadequate experimental controls
Polywater is now universally rejected as a genuine phenomenon
TIMELINE
Fedyakin reports anomalous water properties
Deryagin publishes polywater findings in English
Rousseau demonstrates polywater is contamination
Polywater research abandoned
KEY FIGURES
Nikolai Fedyakin
Soviet scientist who first reported polywater
Boris Deryagin
Soviet chemist who championed polywater research
Denis Rousseau
American scientist who proved polywater was contamination
ORGANIZATIONS
USSR Academy of Sciences
Academic
Bell Labs
Research
SOURCES
RELATED ENTITIES
PEOPLE
Nikolai Fedyakin
Boris Deryagin
Denis Rousseau
ORGANIZATIONS
USSR Academy of Sciences
Bell Labs
EVENTS
Fedyakin reports anomalous water properties
1962
Deryagin publishes polywater findings in English
1966
Rousseau demonstrates polywater is contamination
1969
Polywater research abandoned
1970s
