DePoly

None Mark Peplow, special to C&EN
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2018年,主流媒体对塑料污染的报道达到高潮。肚子里塞满塑料垃圾的死鲸出现在《国家地理》杂志的页面上。科学家们对食物、水和空气中的微塑料表示担忧。充斥着塑料碎片的热带海湾的图片,是我们的废物管理系统失灵的有力证据。萨曼莎·安德森当时是瑞士洛桑联邦理工学院(EPFL)的一名博士生,她清楚地记得这些报告是如何激励她和她的同事采取行动的。她说:“我们决定尝试用化学和化学工程来解决这个问题,因为这是我们所知道的。”安德森和她在EPFL实验室的同事克里斯托弗·爱尔兰(Christopher Ireland)和巴蒂亚·瓦里扎德(Bardiya Valizadeh)一起,开发了一种从复杂的废物流中回收聚对苯二甲酸乙二醇酯(PET)的方法,大多数回收商都拒绝这种方法。2020年,三人共同创立了DePoly to
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
DePoly
In 2018, reports in the mainstream media about plastic pollution reached a crescendo. Dead whales with bellies full of plastic trash appeared on the pages of National Geographic . Scientists voiced concerns about microplastics in our food, water, and air. Images of tropical bays choked with plastic debris offered visceral proof that our waste management systems were failing. Samantha Anderson was a PhD student at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne (EPFL), at the time , and she vividly remembers how these reports spurred her and her colleagues to take action. “We just decided that we were going to try and tackle it with chemistry and chemical engineering, because that’s what we knew,” she says. With her EPFL lab mates Christopher Ireland and Bardiya Valizadeh, Anderson developed a process for recycling polyethylene terephthalate (PET) in complex waste streams that most recyclers reject. In 2020, the trio cofounded DePoly to
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