Derek Muller is performing an experiment that sounds impossible: he's about to demonstrate how something as fragile as aerogel — a material so light it barely exists — can protect human skin from a blowtorch. Not just from heat, but from actual fire. This isn't a magic trick; it's serious materials science, and it's the kind of content that makes Veritasium irresistible.
The Fire Test
Muller begins by establishing what aerogel actually is: "the world's lightest solid," first recognized in 1931 by inventor Samuel Kistler. But he's quick to show its limitations — traditional silica aerogel "breaks pretty easily" and doesn't ring like a bell when struck. It's brittle, fragile, and not very usable.
The pivot comes from a simple question: can you take aerogel's extraordinary thermal insulation properties and make them practical? Muller describes combining "aerogel particles, silica aerogel particles, and a nonflammable binder" to create something he applies directly to his finger. The setup is casual, almost too casual — he's holding a blowtorch, asking viewers if they're nervous. "You're making me nervous holding a blowtorch."
The results are dramatic. With the thermal camera showing temperatures well above the 160°C limit — approaching "almost 1,000 Celsius" — his finger registers only 31°C. The material clearly glows with black body radiation, yet his finger feels warm, not hot. "That is insane," Muller says.
It doesn't feel hot at all. My finger does not feel hot at all.
This is the video's most shareable moment: watching something that looks like it should burn a finger clean off, but feeling nothing more than warmth.
Waterproofing and Total Internal Reflection
The second demonstration takes Muller into a swimming pool — but he's not getting wet. Using gel particles coated on his skin, he creates "a layer of air right next to my skin" that produces total internal reflection. The effect is striking: water doesn't touch him because the boundary between water and air reflects light differently. He emerges completely dry.
The explanation is deceptively simple: "I made myself waterproof with gel particles by taking a bucket of them and coating myself with the tiny dust."
Why This Matters
Muller then pivots to explain why anyone would care about these properties. The hydrophilic version — which absorbs water — has specific applications: museums use it as "a passive moisture regulator," absorbing excess humidity or releasing it to prevent artwork degradation. NASA used aerogel in the Insight mission to Mars because it can absorb moisture from epoxies and cable gas at very low pressures, essentially acting as a "vacuum pump" without power consumption.
The hydrophobic version repels water completely — "it can sit on water for months and be just the same as if it was never wetted at all." This is where the physical insecticide idea comes in: coating surfaces with aerogel particles would literally absorb the oils and moisture from insects, killing them mechanically rather than chemically. It's a radically different approach to pest control that Muller still believes "is a good idea today."
The Materials of Tomorrow
The segment on polyimide aerogel — derived from NASA chemistry — reveals something remarkable: "This is a great insulating material but it's nonflammable." He knocks on it. It feels like wood. Internally, they call it Martian tape.
The composite blankets represent the most practical application. The fiberglass infused with aerogel "feels almost like a stuffed animal" while offering superior insulation. One centimeter of this material equals three centimeters of traditional mineral wool — meaning it's roughly three times more effective at insulating.
Bottom Line
Derek Muller delivers content that works because he performs genuine experiments rather than just explaining them. The fireproofing and waterproofing demonstrations aren't theatrical additions; they're the actual proof of aerogel's properties. His biggest vulnerability is the same as always: these are demonstrations, not rigorous measurements. But for a platform like Veritasium, that's the point — watching something impossible become possible is worth fifteen minutes.
What makes this piece compelling is how Muller moves from the strange (fire that doesn't burn) to the practical (insulating pipelines and spacecraft). He's not selling you on aerogel; he's showing you what it can do. And in a landscape of explainer content, that's genuinely rare.