Terrible news for people in a polyurethanecule.

You’ll often hear plastic pollution referred to as a problem. But the reality is that it’s multiple problems. Depending on the properties we need, we form plastics out of different polymers, each of which is held together by a distinct type of chemical bond. So the method we use to break down one type of polymer may be incompatible with the chemistry of another.

That problem is why, even though we’ve had success finding enzymes that break down common plastics like polyesters and PET, they’re only partial solutions to plastic waste. However, researchers aren’t sitting back and basking in the triumph of partial solutions, and they’ve now got very sophisticated protein design tools to help them out.

That’s the story behind a completely new enzyme that researchers developed to break down polyurethane, the polymer commonly used to make foam cushioning, among other things. The new enzyme is compatible with an industrial-style recycling process that breaks the polymer down into its basic building blocks, which can be used to form fresh polyurethane.

(I generally respect the hell out of Timmer’s writing, but opening consecutive grafs with “that” is lazy.)

  • IrritableOcelot@beehaw.org
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    2 days ago

    Most universities in the US actually don’t have masters’ programs in the natural sciences. There are two ways people typically end up with masters degrees: dropping out of a PhD program, or writing an extra thesis in the 3rd year of your PhD.

    If you’re not worried that you’ll decide to drop out of the PhD, there’s not much point doing the extra thesis and paperwork to get your masters.