This certainly satisfied the science geek in me. lol
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From "Physics Central, Physics buzz blog"

http://physicsbuzz.physicscentral.co...hing-nail.html

Some salon manicures require you to dry your freshly painted nails under a UV light. But why only certain types of manicures and why UV? Why don't you always dry your nails with a UV light? And when you do paint your nails at home, why does cooling wet nails help them dry faster?

Nail polish fundamentally consists of four things: solvents, polymers, pigment, and plasticizers. The plasticizers increase the flexibility of the polish, and pigment adds color. The polymers strengthen the polish, make it easy to spread, and help it stick to the nail. The solvents keep everything mixed together until they evaporate, leaving behind a smooth nail polish.

When painting nails at home, most people just wait around for the nail polish to dry. The older the polish, the longer it takes. The internet is full of tips on how to dry nail polish faster, like setting a hair dryer to 'cool,' sticking your hands in a freezer, using compressed air, and submerging nails in ice water. A lot of these tips focus on lowering the temperature of the nail polish, and the answer why has to do with thermal physics.

There is a certain pressure and temperature at which gas can coexist with a liquid, called the vapor pressure. When the liquid nail polish and the air around your nails are in this state, the polish is evaporating at the same rate that the air around the nail condenses. At room temperature, the evaporation rate is a little faster, the solvents evaporate slowly out of your nail polish, and your nail dries at the 'usual' rate. When you cool the nail, you're lowering the vapor pressure of the solvents in the nail polish and allowing them to evaporate faster, drying your nail quicker.

Then why do you have to finish your nails under a UV light sometimes? Gel manicures are a specific kind of manicure that require UV lights (and sometimes LED lights) to cure the polish. Gel manicures apply a thick gel over the nail (and sometimes nail extensions). These gels also include a photo-initiator, a component that decomposes when exposed to light. These decomposed molecules have an unpaired valence electron that kick-starts the curing process of the gel. If the gel in the manicure is too thick, then sometimes the UV light can't penetrate to the lower layers to cure it. Some gel manicures use LED light to the same end, but the UV version is more common.

A few nail polishes do recommend drying under an incandescent light bulb. Those nail polishes require a small amount of heat (which is why florescent bulbs won't work as a replacement) to set the nail polish. Most nail polish that you buy at the drug store or retail store doesn't require heat or UV light to dry. The next time you paint your nails, try drying them by cooling them down. At least when your friend asks why you have your hands in a bowl of ice water, you can blind them with science.