Scientists have converted waste cooking oil into various recyclable plastics with exceptional strength — and some were even durable enough to tow a car. Turning nonedible waste into useful polymers is a sustainable way to create new materials, the researchers said in a new study published Nov. 28 in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
“91²Ö¿â streams offer a potentially attractive alternative to biomass-derived feedstocks [to make plastics],” the researchers wrote in the study. One such waste stream is used cooking oil, where nearly 3.7 billion gallons is generated each year. This waste oil has so far found uses in lubricants, nonstick coatings and fuel, but much of it still gets thrown away. In the new research, the scientists found a way to convert the waste oil into useful plastic materials that are strongly adhesive and recyclable.
Oil consists of long chains of fatty acids bound to molecules of glycerol (also known as glycerin). The researchers chemically broke the oil molecules apart and then transformed the products into simpler molecules through a series of reactions.
To read the full story, visit .
Author: Mason Wakley, Live Science
Photo by on