Thursday, March 11, 2010

tour srilanka

ENTER TO SINHARAJA TOUR WITH PITADENIYA ENTRANCE

ENTER TO SINHARAJA TOUR FROM KALAWANA ENTRANCE

Ambewela

ENTER TO AMBEWELA TOUR

Kanneliya forest tour

ENTER TO KANNELIYA TOUR

ENTER TO UDAMALA TOUR

Adisham Bunglow of Haputale
ENTER TO Adisham bugloaw TOUR

IBM Makes Plastic From Plants

iBM researchers announced they have discovered a way to make Earth-friendly plastic using organic catalysts from plants.

IBM makes eco-friendly plastic from plants

The new plant-based plastic could quickly replace petroleum-based products that are tough on the environment because they are so slow to degrade.

The plastic research breakthrough promises biodegradable plastics made in a way that saves on energy, according to Chandrasekhar “Spike” Narayan, a manager of science and technology at IBM’s Almaden Research Center in Northern California.

Almaden and Stanford University researchers said the discovery could herald an era of sustainability for a plastics industry rife with seemingly eternal products notorious for cramming landfills and littering the planet.

“This discovery and new approach using organic catalysts could lead to well-defined, biodegradable molecules made from renewable resources in an environmentally responsible way,” IBM said in a press release.

The “green chemistry” breakthrough using “organic catalysts” results in plastics that could be repeatedly recycled, instead of only once as is the case with petroleum-based plastic made using metal oxide catalysts.

Plant plastics could also be made “biocompatible” to improve the targeting of drugs in bodies, such as cancer medicines aimed at killing cancer cells but sparing healthy ones, according to IBM.

“We’re exploring new methods of applying technology and our expertise in materials science to creating a sustainable, environmentally sound future,” said Almaden lab research director Josephine Cheng.

IBM is working on a way to put the discovery to work in the recycling of plastics used in food and beverage containers.

“We are really starting to scratch the surface of what we can do with it,” Narayan said of the process that has been demonstrated in the lab.

Plant plastics for things such as car parts could be made at lower costs than petroleum-based plastics, while biodegradable plastic materials of soda bottle quality are “competitive” on price, according to Narayan.