Chemists Sweeten Plastics For Faster Diodegradation 50
Makarand writes "Nature has an online
article describing attempts
of chemists to create tweaked versions
polythene, polystyrene and polypropylene
that would rapidly biodegrade in a landfill
in the presence of soil bacteria.
Their technique adds sugars to the polymer chains, like pendants on a necklace, sweetening
them in the process and making them
palatable to soil bacteria.
Less than 3% of the final plastic would be sugar.
However, soil bacteria
open the chains when they feed on the sugar
kicking off the decay process."
As if it wasn't sweet enough! (Score:1)
Re:As if it wasn't sweet enough! (Score:2)
That's great, but... (Score:2)
Re:That's great, but... (Score:2, Informative)
Digambar Gokhale and colleagues at the National Chemical Laboratory in Pune mix the styrene subunits of polystyrene with small amounts of another substance that provides a chemical hook for sucrose or glucose pieces. They then add sugars to the styrene chains like pendants on a necklace.
It does say what kind of sugar: sucrose or glucose.
Re:That's great, but... (Score:2)
A cheaper solution (Score:5, Insightful)
Cut plastics out of packaging. Stop making disposeable products.
Is this biodegradeable plastic research really another attempt at planned obsolesence?
Re:That is ridiculous (Score:2)
Eliminating disposeable products is an attraive[sic] alternative for the consumer and the environment. The corporations would like to have you believe otherwise.
The fact that it's just economics is probably the keystone to many of our current problems.
Re:Dont be stupid. (Score:2)
Buy once, use for at least as long as you live (perhaps with some small cash input for maintenance).
The alternative would be to buy a monthly subscripion to the product and be subject to future unexpected(by the consumer) price hikes.
It's somewhat like the difference between open source licences and Microsoft EULA's
Re:Dont be stupid. (Score:1)
If consumers want something, then somebody will sell it. It may cost more, but hey, that's the way it works.
Re:A cheaper solution (Score:1)
Just go to your local shop (food, music, whatever), buy a few products, and figure out for yourself how much of all that plastic you really need...
Re:A cheaper solution (Score:2)
I think the best solution is to legislate that all companies are responsible for their products throughout their entire life-cycle, from their creation to their recovery/recycling. This is already done in a much more ecologically savvy part of the world : Europe.
Obviously... (Score:2)
There was an article not-long ago about an old iBook infested with ants, and someone said that plastics, after a long time, separate, and some of the "corn syrup solids" or whatever float to the top or something, making it like attractive to ants?
Ah screw that....
Actual comment [slashdot.org]. (Attached to story [slashdot.org])
p.s. funny, I didn't even use google this time! Now that's branding -- using Kleenex not just for "facial tissue" but for anything used to wipe anything. I LOVE YOU GOOGLE!!!
Re:Obviously... (Score:2)
Plastic is omnipresent in our society, and while it's not great for the environment, we don't necessarilly want one of natures most prolific creatures chewing on our essential infrastructure.
Re:Obviously... (Score:3, Insightful)
we have different kinds of plastics for different applications. some are well suited for heat, others for flexibility. well, now we will have one that mcdonalds can use and claim to be helping the environment. don't worry your little american schitzo-from-the-doomsaying-tv brain, we won't have a rash of sprinkler systems degrading because the construction company bought 'biodegradable' plastic.
i say use a mug [umich.edu]
word play (Score:4, Funny)
Nah...
Diodegration. When something decomposes due to the work of God?
Nah...
Biodegration. When something decomposes due to the work of biological agents.
BINGO!
Re:word play (Score:5, Funny)
It is as spelled: diodegradation -- the process of grading a collection of diodes, e.g. sorting them according to quality.
Although I'm not sure what that has to do with rottable plastic...
Parent is right! (Score:1)
A quick Google search did reveal a paper on "Diodegradation of Cationic Surfactants" [scienceinthebox.com], which looked promising because of the "cation" (cathode/ion) reference. Alas, no other references to diodes [google.com] were included.
Searching on the words separately yielded a Panasonic CD Receiver [panasonic.com], but no sites showed up with the term enclosed in quotes.
Whatever. Now, I should probably go read the article before I go any farther off-topic. No +1 bonus for this reply!
mmmm...plastic (Score:1)
Important part (Score:4, Insightful)
Tim
Re:Important part (Score:1)
Adding the sugar monomer is a very good idea to get the bacteria to break the long chains into smaller parts quickly. A nice idea, if I ever saw one. The question is: can such polymers be constructed so that they keep the same mechanical properties, at a low enough cost so that they are used...
In Soviet Russia... (Score:2)
Somewhat related interesting tidbit (Score:1)
Cement should never be stored in bags previouly used to stored sugar because it weakens the cement.
Ants & other assorted insects (Score:4, Funny)
Good news (Score:2)
I'm also curious as to how this will effect plastic recycling? Are these new plastics recyclable? Do we really recycle plastics if we are trying to make more biodegradeable materials?
Plastics and, no, IN you (Score:2, Insightful)
Now we have lots of tiny microscopic bits of plastic floating around everywhere. Free for all to ingest in the water or air they breath. When all's said and done, I'd rather have an evian bottle laying on the sidewalk than floating in the air I'm breathing.
What's the 1/2 life of the plastic molecules themselves? How toxic are they?
What about the plasticizers (sp?) in the plastic. I believe they're some of the more carciogenic chemicals we've come up with.
This sounds like a 2 edged sword moving in the wrong direction. Have I missed something?
Re:Plastics and, no, IN you (Score:1)
Uhhh, forever?
I sure hope my coke bottles aren't radioactive.
Re:Plastics and, no, IN you (Score:4, Informative)
Apparently.
It doesn't break down into smaller pieces of plastic (well, it does, but that's a first step). The polystyrene chain is broken into smaller units as the bacteria attack the linked sugars. Those smaller units can then be broken down directly by the bacteria.
Most plastics are poly-hydrocarbons (although stuff like PVC and teflon throw chlorine or fluorine atoms into the mix). Depolymerize them and you get hydrocarbons, which all sorts of bacteria find yummy (depending on the specific hydrocarbon -- but styrene and ethylene both occur in nature (styrene in strawberries, coffee, etc, and ethylene is a chemical trigger produced by and recognized by fruits to hasten the ripening process.)
Sweet Cables (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Sweet Cables (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Sweet Cables (Score:2)
The cat just sat there confused for a second and then took off and hid. We didn't see him for two days. He finally came out to eat and was fine. He learned his lesson though. He never chewed on another wire until the day he died.
Re:Sweet Cables (Score:2)
Second one got 'im, eh?
Re:Sweet Cables (Score:1)
Then again, my cats don't need any encouragement to chew plastic either. One of my cats just loves to chew the phone cord on the kitchen phone. I would coat it with pepper spray to make it taste awful, but it tends to bump him in the face at he plays with it while I talk on the phone. Now for computer cables, that would work really nicely. I'd suggest trying that.
Not enough information. (Score:1)
I see a problem with this... (Score:1)
Melty 'puter.
Re:I see a problem with this... (Score:2)
Diabetics? (Score:1)
Degradability won't help in the landfill (Score:2)
But that ignores an important fact: nothing degrades in the landfill! To prevent groundwater contamination, landfills are lined and capped with impermeable materials that keep water out, and no water = no bacterial action.
A poster in a previous discussion on landfills and biodegradability pointed out that you can open up a landfill and find 30-year-old newspapers, preserved just like new. Compare that with laying a newspaper out in your front yard. Degradable in the open, yes, Degradable in a sealed environment, no.
Degradable plastics (however they decompose) are just another red herring to distract us from the real issues of truly sustainable development.