Jump to content

A Student Made A Biodegradable Water Bottle Out Of Algae


JANASENA

Recommended Posts

Water-Bottle-750x500.jpg

 

 

 

Algae could save the world from plastics
Ari Jonsson, a product design student of Iceland academy of arts has found a solution to the menace called plastics by creating a biodegradable bottle made from Algae. He combined the red algae powder with water to create this “unique” biodegradable bottle.  A plastic bottle takes up to 450 years to decompose. Approx 40 billion bottles littered globally  are made from millions of barrels of oil not to mention the enormous environmental damage plastics have done.
Ari Jonsson said “I read that 50 percent of plastic is used once and then thrown away so I feel there is an urgent need to find ways to replace some of the unreal amount of plastic we make, use and throw away each day” .

biodegradable-algae-water-bottle-ari-jon

“You could even bite the bottle”.

Jonsson exhibited this project during a design festival held from 10 March – 16 March. He studied the strength and weakness of materials that he could use as a substance for creating a water bottle. Eventually, he came across a powdered form of agar, a substance made from algae . He then rotated the mould while deluged in a bucket of cold water. He placed it in a freezer for few minutes before the algae bottle was extracted from the mould. As long as it is filled with water, the shape of the bottle will remain in its shape. However, once it is emptied, the bottle will start shrinking to decompose. The bottle is made from 100% natural resources, so, it is safe to drink water stored in it. The best part is that the bottle is edible. If someone likes the taste, can bite it.  80 percent of the trash that ends up in the oceans comes from land-based sources and nearly 90 percent of that is plastic.

“If it fails, or if the bottom is too thin or it has a hole in it, I can just reheat it and pour it into the mould again,” said Jónsson.

Algae-Water-Bottle-Break-Down.jpg

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

brilliant.

 

such projects are routinely made in some open source labs. The problem is in mass manufacturing them.

 

people who invent these things lose interest once they understand the complexity of commoditizing their inventions.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

brilliant.

 

such projects are routinely made in some open source labs. The problem is in mass manufacturing them.

 

people who invent these things lose interest once they understand the complexity of commoditizing their inventions.

 

ilaanti lab wonders , mass produce cheyyadam kastam antaavaa?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

ilaanti lab wonders , mass produce cheyyadam kastam antaavaa?

 

technical issues are not the only problem. other factors like creating market demand, supply chains, etc, a huge turn off for brilliant innovators.

 

that's why many such innovations lie in the lab. Even in electronics (not just consumer products, but even hi-tech industrial solutions).

 

some day, some steve jobs will come around and claim everything for himself. and push the boundaries of commerce.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

technical issues are not the only problem. other factors like creating market demand, supply chains, etc, a huge turn off for brilliant innovators.

 

that's why many such innovations lie in the lab. Even in electronics (not just consumer products, but even hi-tech industrial solutions).

 

some day, some steve jobs will come around and claim everything for himself. and push the boundaries of commerce.

 

makes sense

http://www.thehindu.com/2000/03/12/stories/01120007.htm

kaani ilaanti cases choosaka , innovation ani cheppinaa , edo mathlab undhi ani anumaanisthaaremo 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...