ABOUT US     SITEMAP       HOME     VIETNAMESE EDITION  
 SEARCH 


 
HOME PAGE
 
   POLITICS
   BUSINESS
   SOCIETY
   YOUTH
   SPORTS
   ENTERTAINMENT
   TRAVEL
   HEALTH
   WORLD / REGION
   SPECIAL REPORT
   COMMENTARIES
   COMMUNITY
   EDITORIAL
----------------------------



 
 
 
 
Thanh Nien
 

Chief Editor : Mr. Nguyen Quang Thong
Managing Deputy Editor: Mr. Dang Thanh Tinh
248 Cong Quynh St . , Distr. 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
Tel: 84 8 8 394 046
Fax: 84 8 8 322 025

Thanh Nien is the tribune of Vietnam’s Youth Association

Publication permit No. 14/GP-BC, granted by Press Department, Vietnam Ministry of Culture and Information.

Hot News: 
Last Updated:
E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend Print versionPrint version
Vietnamese scientists come up with natural plastic
Truong Phuoc Nghia holds a piece of nanocomposite plastic that is fully biodegradable in a landfill, according to a research which he leads in the Ho Chi Minh City University of Sciences
A group of Vietnamese researchers say they have developed a plastic material that is both biodegradable and much cheaper to produce.

They are convenient, water resistant and cheap. These qualities make plastic bags second to none as the packaging of choice for most products.

However, they have huge disadvantages especially in how friendly they are to the environment.

They are made from non-renewable sources – oil and gas – and they are not biodegradable, as it takes them between 500 and 1,000 years to decompose in natural conditions.

Scientists, therefore, have long been trying to create biodegradable plastic (or bioplastic) as a solution.

The material in the process of degrading after three months in landfill

As part of the country’s efforts to reduce the use of plastic bags, some local companies have imported technologies producing bioplastic from other countries like the US and Canada for hundreds of thousand dollars.

Recently, research scientists from the Ho Chi Minh City-based University of Sciences have developed a material to make biodegradable plastic bags (or bioplastic bags) with several advantages over the imported ones.

According to the result of a project initiated four years ago, the material not only can degrade fully in land within a short time but also make the cost of bags produced with it much cheaper, says Truong Phuoc Nghia, the group’s leader.

He says the material, known as nanocomposite, is a mix of thermoplastic starch (made from starch), polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), a kind of polymer clay, and some food additives, adding that it is made with nanotechnology.

Associate Professor Ha Thuc Huy, who directs the group, says this allows the material to be fully biodegradable in landfill where microorganisms will eat it up within a short time, between one to six months.

PVA costs less than VND30,000 (US$1.75) per kilogram if imported in bulk, while polypropylene (PP) and polyethylene (PE), which are components in bioplastic produced with foreign technologies, cost some VND40,000 ($2.33) per kilogram, according to Nghia.

This plus starch from the locally abundant wheat and cassava allows them to produce bags from the material at a much lower cost just 30 percent or so of foreign-produced ones, Nghia says.

Tests have shown that the material’s ductility and elasticity are the same as common plastics.

The material, in fact, can become a redoubtable competitor to the common plastic which is rarely reusable, according to the scientists.

“Nanocomposite bags can be re-used many times, if they do not come into contact with water,” Nghia says.

However, Nghia says to make bags from the material, it is necessary to invest in machinery to make it into plastic grains and then process and sharpen it.

Huy, meanwhile, says if the group receives adequate sponsorship to do more research on industrial production, products made of the new material can be launched in the market within a year.

A project proposal has been submitted to the HCMC Department of Science and Technology for sponsorship to continue their research, Nghia says.

If this does not go through, they may cooperate with a foreign partner, he adds.

Nghia says Vietnam uses about half a million tons of polymer to make plastic bags and the figures is increasing year by year.

HCMC residents discard over 6,000 tons of waste a month, up to 7.5 percent of which is made up of plastic bags, according to statistics from the city’s Department of Environment and Natural Resources released last year.

Source: Tuoi Tre, SGTT

E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend Print versionPrint version To top
 OTHER TOP STORIES
Hanoi students dismayed about change in school name
Vietnam film students inspired by surprise Hollywood victory
Mass killing may push Vietnam’s tigers to extinction in 12 years
Vietnam, US universities offer MBA for working people
Quang Nam to grow organic veggies with Japanese knowhow
 
 OTHER HEADLINES
Don’t let foreign bosses do whatever they like
Vietnamese mathematician to teach at US university
Teachers cannot make their mark without insightful comments
Climate change fails to thwart resort rush
Shuttle Endeavour blasts off for space station
Delta workers hospitalized after mass hysteria attack
Flowers on the water
Writing history
Binh Duong slides into first place
Earth Hour 2010 Vietnam seeks greater climate change awareness
More flights means more traffic before Tet
Biggest gold outfit imports 4 tons to keep prices in check
US to boost national defense cooperation with Vietnam

   
 
 
Politics | Business | Society | Youth | Sports | Entertainment | Travel | Health | 
World / Region | Special report | Commentaries | Community | Editorial | 
Homepage | Contact | Sitemap | About us | Vietnam Edition
Copyright © 2004 Privacy policy