By Sebastian Pop, Softpedia.com
One aspect of the IT industry is that it is always evolving. The other is that it has always been among the primary sources of
toxic waste, otherwise known as e-waste. Electronics have a certain lifespan, after which they get defected and inevitably end up in garbage dumps. Some products get recycled, but there is a range of materials and substances that can be
classified as toxic through their very nature. These substances have the potential of turning any product, at least partially, into the bane of life. LCDs have long been among the top-ranking potentially hazardous items on the market.
Liquid Crystal Displays classify as hazardous because they utilize a range of
toxic chemicals, such as halogens and mercury, among other things. Granted, makers of such devices have come up with ecological substitutes for most of them, as is evident by the various Green LCDs on sale. PVA, however, the polyvinyl-alcohol inside LCD TVs and monitors, cannot so easily be replaced. Knowing this, a team of scientists from the University of York decided they would, instead, make something useful out of it.
Apparently, heating the PVA, then cooling and dehydrating it with ethanol leads to the appearance of a surface area of mesoporous material. This material has a high medicinal potential because, either on its own or when combined with silver nanoparticles, it can slay microbes, and even more troublesome life-ending things such as E.coli.
Linkback:
https://tubagbohol.mikeligalig.com/index.php?topic=29915.0