A Method.

Peregrinator

Hooded On A Hill
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The procedure called RISUG in India (reversible inhibition of sperm under guidance) takes about 15 minutes with a doctor, is effective after about three days, and lasts for 10 or more years. A doctor applies some local anesthetic, makes a small pinhole in the base of the scrotum, reaches in with a pair of very thin forceps, and pulls out the small white vas deferens tube. Then, the doctor injects the polymer gel (called Vasalgel here in the US), pushes the vas deferens back inside, repeats the process for the other vas deferens, puts a Band-Aid over the small hole, and the man is on his way. If this all sounds incredibly simple and inexpensive, that’s because it is. The chemicals themselves cost less than the syringe used to administer them. But the science of what happens next is the really fascinating part.

The two common chemicals — styrene maleic anhydride and dimethyl sulfoxide — form a polymer that thickens over the next 72 hours, much like a pliable epoxy, but the purpose of these chemicals isn’t to harden and block the vas deferens. Instead, the polymer lines the wall of the vas deferens and allows sperm to flow freely down the middle (this prevents any pressure buildup), and because of the polymer’s pattern of negative/positive polarization, the sperm are torn apart through the polyelectrolytic effect. On a molecular level, it’s what supervillains envision will happen when they stick the good guy between two huge magnets and flip the switch.
 
"In a matter of minutes, the injection coats the walls of the vas with a clear gel made of 60 mg of the copolymerstyrene/maleic anhydride(SMA)
with 120 µL of the solvent dimethyl sulfoxide. The copolymer is made by irradiation of the two monomers with a dose of 0.2 to 0.24 megarad
for every 40 g of copolymer and a dose rate of 30 to 40 rad/s. The source of irradiation is cobalt-60gamma radiation."

"Within an hour, the drugs produce an electrical charge that nullifies the electrical charge of the spermatozoa, preventing it
from penetrating the ovum," Dr.Sujoy K Guha said.

http://specials.rediff.com/money/2008/apr/01contra1.htm

A biomedical engineer, Guha was born in Patna in 1939. He did his graduation and masters in electrical engineering from IIT Kharagpur.
 
The NFPA HFR ratings give maleic anhydride a health rating of 3, which is very dangerous even for instantaneous exposure. Anhydride forms an acid in presence of any water. The MSDS lists the Time Weighted Average exposure limit at 0.25 ppm. That's pretty small.

There are vanishingly few things I'm willing to coat the inside of my cock with, and an anhydride is miles from that list.
 
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