a team of chemists, lead by Dr Justin Chalker at Flinders University in South Australia, has developed a new material to permanently remove mercury from soil and water.
It's called Sulfur-Limonene Polysulfide, or SLP for short.
"SLP is a polymer that looks like red rubber, and is made quite cheaply from industrial by-products," said Dr Chalker. "We can make it into any shape we want."
As its full name suggests, SLP is manufactured from sulfur – a by-product of the crude oil industry – and limonene, which is found in orange peel and an unused waste material from the citrus industry. Both components are readily and cheaply available, making SLP a highly sustainable product.
"To make the SLP polymer, we melt the sulfur, and add limonene to it and then can coat devices or make it into any shape we like," said Dr Chalker.
By lining storage containers with SLP, Dr Chalker and his colleagues have successfully removed mercury from river and pond water, and soil.
The material can transform water from toxic to nearly drinkable, with concentrations of mercury reduced a thousand fold, from several parts per million down to only several parts per billion.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by HiThere on Tuesday October 20 2015, @06:53PM
Maybe. If you keep it dry or sterile. But I wouldn't put it past some bacterium to decide the stuff was yummy. and release the mercury in an available form.
OTOH, if this is a new synthetic (not previously see in nature) then it might take awhile before that happens. The various plastic eaters are just starting to appear. But that's a lot different from permanent.
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