Submitted by filosoful t3_yke9cq in Futurology
Comments
dakinekine t1_iusyj2w wrote
Anything to avoid fixing the actual problem
stdoubtloud t1_iutf2no wrote
I know, right. No one ever talks about the real problem: cytotoxic wasps.
Beautifulblueocean t1_iutouar wrote
I thought the mechanical bees took care of the cytotoxic wasps no?
youarewastingtime t1_iuu389j wrote
I can just smell the profits… oh wait thats a bloody nose from the pollution never mind
scaleofthought t1_iuu3wwm wrote
Thanks for the tip. I'm buying stocks in blood coagulants and platelet transfusions! I'll be rich!
filosoful OP t1_iusrl1q wrote
Scientists developed iron oxide nanoparticles with water-resistant coatings. They showed that microplastics in water bind to the particles, which can then be removed with a magnet.
The paper is here.
Scoobydoomed t1_iusrt74 wrote
Is there anything magnets can't do?
FibroBitch96 t1_iuuca1l wrote
They can’t make your dad love you
GraciousVibrations t1_iuyx8wp wrote
Make it stop ✋😭💀
Brice706 t1_iut291m wrote
Hmmm...Removing plastic pollution from water using nanoparticles... and then the nanoparticles evolve to eat all the fish in the sea...and then they're still reproducing, and hungry, and decide to move on to land animals....! Oh, what a good sci-fi story this would make!
RunF4Cover t1_iuu3nj8 wrote
It’s called the gray goo hypothesis.
slickhedstrong t1_iuu6ef3 wrote
i call it horizon zero dawn: evangelion
Rol3ino t1_iuvbxay wrote
Pretty sure this was what happened in the cat game “Stray”, apart from it occurring in water.
Hitemup27 t1_iutzgxu wrote
To fight the microplastics we must become the microplastics.
GraciousVibrations t1_iuyxff7 wrote
With you, may the microplastics be young one.
BravestCrone t1_iuu23fl wrote
How about we stop using plastic for everything? Avoid pollution to begin with? Why clean it up if more is plastic is just gonna get poured into the ocean? This technology doesn’t address the root of the problem, it just throws money at the symptoms
WastelandPuppy t1_iuvitse wrote
That's suggesting to just leave the already existing microplastic in our environment...
[deleted] t1_iusy87q wrote
This isn’t being reported anywhere but all of us are consuming about a credit card’s worth of plastic a week. We are allowing corporations to poison the entire human race for convenient packaging for their shitty brands.
slickhedstrong t1_iuu6h3l wrote
meh, we probably deserve it
[deleted] t1_iuu5b3j wrote
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Alexstarfire t1_iuuygd4 wrote
A credit card worth? Got something to back that up with? Cause that sounds like an urban myth.
not_bendy t1_iutaf1n wrote
I don't know whyyyyyy... she swallowed that flyyy. Perhaps we'll die
FuturologyBot t1_iusx4a5 wrote
The following submission statement was provided by /u/filosoful:
Scientists developed iron oxide nanoparticles with water-resistant coatings. They showed that microplastics in water bind to the particles, which can then be removed with a magnet.
The paper is here.
Please reply to OP's comment here: https://old.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/yke9cq/removing_plastic_pollution_from_water_using/iusrl1q/
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razorxent t1_iuw3kn5 wrote
I used the nanoparticles to destroy the nanoparticles
[deleted] t1_ixc49r4 wrote
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flourishingvoid t1_iutcayh wrote
Sounds a bit too "futuristic"
We had a discussion ( in my Biophysicist group of 3 ) about specialized bacteria bred to consume plastic with non-toxic metabolic residues, and in just 15 minutes we isolated dozen or so serious issues with the theory.
I will give you just one.
What may happen if lab-bred bacteria follow the trend of consumption-based mutations and became create variants targeting not only waste but also more "energy-dense matter", and now we created species that can consume everything.
Death_or_Pizza t1_iutffhc wrote
What do you mean with energy dense? I mean there are lots of energy dense polymers which bacterias can consume? This already exists?
flourishingvoid t1_iutg95s wrote
By more energy dense I meant organic matter ( is it dead or not) with pretty clear indication.
FTRFNK t1_iuu9ara wrote
Not really futuristic, surprising to say from a physicist to think literally manipulating living organisms to do a specific task is easier than making an inorganic small thing from minerals and then taking them out with a magnet.
Seems pretty simple to me. People have these weird conceptions about anything with a "nano" in front of it, particularly anything "nanoparticle".
Nanoparticle is literally just very very small, well, particle. This is quite literally just a very small iron oxide particle with a charged coating. What's futuristic about thar? There are iron molecules and oxygen molecules all around us. What's futuristic about using a giant magnet? If people cared about microplastics back in the day, we could have done this like 30 years ago.
flourishingvoid t1_iuurttv wrote
Nanoparticles that 'accumulate' or stick to specific substances aren't the same as nanomachines ( I was referring to ), they are still nanoparticles but much more complex in design, and less volatile when it comes to degradation from different chemicals and other environmental factors.
WastelandPuppy t1_iuvizo5 wrote
These already exist and trillions of them are trying to eat you all the time.
slickhedstrong t1_iusun40 wrote
And then cleaning up the nano particles with radioactive snakes and then breeding gorillas that eat radioactive snakes, and then, this is the beauty part, winter simply kills the gorillas.