Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

From Lobster To Loofah? B.C. Chemist Works To Turn Shells Into Plastics

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Aug, 2016 12:14 PM
    VANCOUVER — Where most people see an empty shell after a tasty dinner, a scientist in Vancouver sees an opportunity to create a sustainable new plastic.
     
    Chemist Mark MacLachlan at the University of British Columbia is working to turn shells from lobsters, crabs and shrimp into natural materials that can be used in a variety of objects, including batteries, coffee cups or medical supplies. 
     
    "Shells are a large waste product from the food industry, shrimp shells and crab shells especially," he said. "But the chemistry needed to transform them into something useful is not too difficult."
     
    The process involves removing minerals and proteins from the shell, which leaves behind a bio material called chitin, MacLachlan explained.
     
    MacLachlan and his team have been working to turn the chitin into other materials, many of which are colourful or iridescent because of the natural structure of the substance.
     
    Some of the chitin materials are being used as sensors that change colour when they're squeezed, he said, and they are also converting them into electrodes that could be used for batteries.
     
    But the scientists believe the material could also be turned into a biodegradable plastic that comes from a renewable source.
     
    "Normal plastics come from the oil industry, so there's a big drive to make greener plastics from natural materials like cellulose and chitin," MacLachlan said.
     
     
    Not only is the source of the plastic renewable, it's something that would usually be considered garbage. The shells MacLachlan and his team use for their research come from two sources: a Vancouver restaurant and a post-doctoral student's kitchen.
     
    Despite the shell's humble beginnings, MacLachlan said the plastic made from them could be used to create all sorts of items, from coffee cups or disposable dishes to medical supplies, such as wound dressing or sutures.
     
    There could be advantages to using the new material, too, based on its unique properties.
     
    "Chitin is this super material from crabs and other arthropods that over millions and millions of years has evolved this amazing structure that makes it really, really hard. So the plastics we make from it can have advantageous properties for different applications," MacLachlan explained.
     
    Knowing that his research could have an impact on how everyday objects are created in the future is a special feeling, MacLachlan said.
     
    "It's great to know that you could have an impact," he said. "We'd all like to know that you can change the world."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police, Judges Legislators Meet To Discuss Balancing Cybercrime With Privacy

    Police, Judges Legislators Meet To Discuss Balancing Cybercrime With Privacy
    HALIFAX — Judges, lawyers, legislators and law enforcement officials from around the world are meeting in Halifax to discuss the unique challenges of delivering justice in the digital age.

    Police, Judges Legislators Meet To Discuss Balancing Cybercrime With Privacy

    Ontario To Stop Paying For High-Dose Opioids In Push To Reduce Addiction

    Ontario To Stop Paying For High-Dose Opioids In Push To Reduce Addiction
      Ontario will be the first province to stop paying for high doses of long-acting opioids as part of a push to reduce the "growing problem" of painkiller addiction in the province.

    Ontario To Stop Paying For High-Dose Opioids In Push To Reduce Addiction

    Summer Camp For Young Syrian Refugees Mixes Fun, Crash Course On Canadian Life

    Summer Camp For Young Syrian Refugees Mixes Fun, Crash Course On Canadian Life
    "I don't know what you've been told!" an eager counsellor bellows in sing-song fashion at a group of young Syrian refugees.

    Summer Camp For Young Syrian Refugees Mixes Fun, Crash Course On Canadian Life

    Former Mayor Rob Ford's Legacy To Be Put To Test In Toronto Byelection

    TORONTO — Former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford's legacy will be put to the test on Monday as voters choose who will inherit the late politician's west-end ward at the heart of so-called Ford Nation.

    Former Mayor Rob Ford's Legacy To Be Put To Test In Toronto Byelection

    B.C. To Bring In A Real Estate Tax On Foreign Buyers

    B.C. To Bring In A Real Estate Tax On Foreign Buyers
    Finance Minister Mike de Jong introduced the tax as part of legislation aimed at addressing low vacancy rates and high real estate prices.

    B.C. To Bring In A Real Estate Tax On Foreign Buyers

    Homicide Investigators Seek Motive In Suspected Targeted Shooting In Surrey, B.C.

    Homicide Investigators Seek Motive In Suspected Targeted Shooting In Surrey, B.C.
    Police responded to reports of shots fired in the 14300 block of 90A Avenue just before 10:30 p.m. where they found two victims in their late 20s 

    Homicide Investigators Seek Motive In Suspected Targeted Shooting In Surrey, B.C.