this post was submitted on 24 Apr 2024
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science
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just science related topics. please contribute
note: clickbait sources/headlines aren't liked generally. I've posted crap sources and later deleted or edit to improve after complaints. whoops, sry
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Maybe I'm missing where the article said it, but what does it break the plastic down into? That seems like it would be pretty critical information in terms of the utility here.
my guess is that something else will be able to unzip it and use it as an energy source
yep in the linked article it is mentioned that product is ethylene glycol
That's really interesting. Other than the common usage as antifreeze in your car and for airplane de-icing ethylene glycol is a precursor for plastics used in soda bottles. Left on it's own ethylene glycol breaks down into CO2 eventually.
Wikipedia article about ethylene glycol including uses
Stack Overflow answer containing the ethylene glycol decomposition process
It’s also a molecule that can be used in the process to make any number of other products, including vanilla flavoring, per the article
Well we don't need more of that... Shit.
Mercury :)
~/s~
That's pretty cool.
Just to be clear, I'm taking the piss.
ohhhh, and it's your piss that produces the mercury? that is cool.
It's better than the asbestos my dandruff is made of.
It’s pretty metal, too..
From the research article results there are various compounds.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-33127-w
Ethylene glycol.
It's toxic to mammals.
Not the big solution that's hoped for then, I guess.
We use this molecule to make numerous other things, like vanilla flavoring per the article….
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zFZ5jQ0yuNA
This guy makes cool chemistry videos
Lots of things are toxic, we can deal with them in industrial settings just fine. Pretty much everything we use is toxic at some point in its manufacturing process
Cool, good thing all of those landfills full of plastic won't leak those chemicals anywhere.
Just don't do it in the landfills, then? Ethylene glycol is a chemical with practical uses, there's no reason not to collect it in a recycling facility.
Don't let perfect be the enemy of good.
I don't think anyone is suggesting you manufacture this enzyme and just pour it onto a landfill.
wondering same. exothermic? worms like it I guess