Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
International

Mumbai-Born Indo-Australian Scientist Develops Microfactory To Tackle E-Waste Hazard

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Apr, 2018 01:13 PM
    In a pioneering effort to tackle the growing mountains of e-waste, an IIT-trained Australian scientist of Indian origin at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) here has helped launch the world's first microfactory that can transform electronic waste (e-waste) like smartphones and laptops into valuable material for re-use.
     
     
    Professor Veena Sahajwalla, a materials scientist at UNSW and Director of the Centre for Sustainable Materials Research and Technology (SMaRT) at the varsity, said the e-waste microfactory is the first of a series under development and in testing at UNSW which is now actively wooing Indian students to its Sydney campus.
     
     
    These microfactories can also turn many types of consumer waste such as glass, plastic and timber into commercial materials and products.
     
     
    Using technology developed after extensive scientific research at the SMaRT Centre, the e-waste microfactory has the potential to reduce the rapidly growing problem of vast amounts of electronic waste that cause environmental harm and go into landfills.
     
     
    The microfactories can use e-waste like computer circuit boards to make metal alloys such as copper and tin, while glass and plastic from e-devices can be converted into micromaterials used in industrial-grade ceramics and plastic filaments for 3D printing.
     
     
     
     
    "Our e-waste (microfactory) and another under development for other consumer waste types offer a cost-effective solution to one of the greatest environmental challenges of our age, while delivering new job opportunities to our cities but importantly to our rural and regional areas, too," said the Mumbai-born Sahajwalla, who did her B.Tech in metallurgical engineering from IIT Kanpur in 1986.
     
     
    "Using our green manufacturing technologies, these microfactories can transform waste where it is stockpiled and created, enabling local businesses and communities to not only tackle local waste problems but develop a commercial opportunity from the valuable materials that are created," she said.
     
     
    According to Sahajwalla, microfactories present a solution to burning and burying of waste items that contain materials that can be transformed into value-added substances and products to meet existing and new industry and consumer demands. She termed microfactories a "truly sustainable solution to our growing waste problem while offering economic benefits available to local communities".
     
     
    "We have proven you can transform just about anything at the micro-level and transform waste streams into value-added products. For example, instead of looking at plastics as just a nuisance, we've shown scientifically that you can generate materials from that waste stream to create smart filaments for 3D printing," she said.
     
     
    "These microfactories can transform the manufacturing landscape, especially in remote locations where typically the logistics of having waste transported or processed are prohibitively expensive. This is especially beneficial for the island markets and the remote and regional regions of the country."
     
     
    UNSW has developed the technology with support from the Australian Research Council and is now in partnership with a number of businesses and organisations, including e-waste recycler TES, mining manufacturer Moly-Cop, and Dresden which makes spectacles.
     
     
     
     
    UNSW is one of the world's leading research and teaching universities and is home to more than 52,000 students from nearly 130 countries. UNSW is ranked 45th in the world, according to QS World University ranking.
     
     
    Sahajwalla has received numerous awards, including Distinguished Alumnus Award by the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur for her outstanding contributions in the field of materials processing for sustainable development (2015), and also the Eureka Prize (2005), Pravasi Bhartiya Samman for outstanding achievement in science (2011).

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Trudeau Meets Trump: How Past PMs Have Dealt With Unpopular U.S. Presidents

    Canada's prime minister has to go see the U.S. president, and he's not especially thrilled. The president is deeply unpopular in Canada — and elsewhere, since campaigning on protectionism and tariffs.

    Trudeau Meets Trump: How Past PMs Have Dealt With Unpopular U.S. Presidents

    ISIS Continues To Recruit From Af-Pak Border Region: UN Report

    The report noted that a UN Member State reported that ISIS had around 2,000 to 3,500 fighters overall in Afghanistan but that number had not fallen significantly despite heavy losses sustained in 2016.

    ISIS Continues To Recruit From Af-Pak Border Region: UN Report

    US Firms Going Abroad Can't Say 'Bye-Bye And Fire Everybody', Warns Donald Trump

    In his weekly address to the nation, Donald Trump also said that he is working on a major tax reform which would massively reduce taxes of American workers and businesses.

    US Firms Going Abroad Can't Say 'Bye-Bye And Fire Everybody', Warns Donald Trump

    Woman Says 'Justice' In Sexual Assault Case Came At Personal Cost

    Woman Says 'Justice' In Sexual Assault Case Came At Personal Cost
    While the 22-year-old Nova Scotia woman says ultimately "justice was served" by the courts, she maintains it came at such a personal cost she would have been better off had she never gone to the authorities.

    Woman Says 'Justice' In Sexual Assault Case Came At Personal Cost

    Quebec Student Athlete Says He Was Denied Entry To The United States

    Quebec Student Athlete Says He Was Denied Entry To The United States
    Yassine Aber, 19, was denied entry to the United States on Thursday. The Canadian-born athlete faced questions about his place of birth, his parents and countries he's visited recently. 

    Quebec Student Athlete Says He Was Denied Entry To The United States

    India Will Be World's Fastest Growing Economy In 5 Years: Top US Think Tank

    India Will Be World's Fastest Growing Economy In 5 Years: Top US Think Tank
    Pakistan, unable to match India's economic prowess, will seek other methods to maintain even a semblance of balance

    India Will Be World's Fastest Growing Economy In 5 Years: Top US Think Tank