Carbon Dioxide to Plastics

Can Greenhouse Gas be Raw Material for CDs?

© Simon Davies

Apr 10, 2008

New research presented at the American Chemical Society meeting proposes using carbon dioxide from power station chimneys to produce an important plastic.


One important factor in today's quest for a solution to climate change will be new ideas from the chemical industry and university departments. We can't just turn the clock back to times when we didn't produce so much carbon dioxide. Society has moved on and developed and we need to find new ways of doing things.

An example of what this might mean has just been presented to the American Chemical Society's 235th Annual Meeting. German chemist, Thomas Muller, has proposed a method by which the carbon dioxide, which is so plentifully available in the smokestacks of industries that burn fossil fuels, can be converted into a polymer known as polycarbonate.

Polycarbonate is a hard tough material used for applications such as CDs and DVDs, lenses for spectacles, drinks bottles and car headlight casings. To be able to use carbon dioxide to make these products and so avoid releasiong it into the atmosphere can only be a good thing.


Post this Blog to facebook Add this Blog to del.icio.us! Digg this Blog furl this Blog Add this Blog to Reddit Add this Blog to Technorati Add this Blog to Newsvine Add this Blog to Windows Live Add this Blog to Yahoo Add this Blog to StumbleUpon Add this Blog to BlinkLists Add this Blog to Spurl Add this Blog to Google Add this Blog to Ask Add this Blog to Squidoo