Hungry Worms Could Help Solve Plastic Pollution
Hungry Worms Could Help Solve Plastic Pollution by Ritsuko Kawai
Looking ahead, the team suggests two strategies for using the wax worm’s ability to consume plastics. One is to mass produce wax worms that are fed on a polyethylene diet, while providing them with the nutritional support they need for long-term survival, and then integrating them into the circular economy, using the insects themselves to dispose of waste plastic. The other is to redesign the plastic degradation pathway of wax worms in the lab, using only microorganisms and enzymes, and so create a means of disposing of plastic that doesn’t need the actual insects.
Looks like nuclear fusion is picking up steam
Looks like nuclear fusion is picking up steam by Justine Calma
The number of companies developing fusion technologies has grown, particularly in North America and Europe. You can take a look at CATF’s fusion map to see where this is all happening, including government-supported programs.
I first read about nuclear fusion in school. I had made a big science report drawing the tokamak design, etc.
It still looks some decades away.
If successful it will be a big day, a big step forward.
Can We Harness Light Like Nature for a New Era of Green Chemistry
Can We Harness Light Like Nature for a New Era of Green Chemistry? - Slashdot
Sunlight becomes energy when plants convert four photons of light. But unfortunately, most attempts at synthetic light-absorbing chemicals can only absorb one photon at a time.
When I read the headline this was a better way to convert solar energy to electricity resulting in better PV cells maybe. I don’t know why I thought that.
Photosynthesis is not about that.
This is about producing carbanions.