In an
effort to improve the plant's conditions, man is in constant search to improve
and undo the damage that's already been done. Sixteen year-old Elif Belgin has
had an early start by creating bioplastics made from banana peels
Daily Sabah, Leyla
Yvonne Ergil, 21.08.2014
Elif
Bilgin: Turkey's environmental wonder kid Recently on my Facebook feed, I have
been seeing links to a video of a 16-yearold Turkish girl from Istanbul by the
name of Elif Bilgin who has successfully created a bioplastic out of banana
peels. Although Bilgin was awarded the Scientific American Science in Action
Award and the Voter's Choice Award in the 2013 Google Science Fair. In thevideo, Bilgin explains that she began the project when she was just 14, having
become frustrated with the plastic pollution she saw in the Bosporus.
She found
out that petroleum based plastics are causing a vast amount of pollution and
that bioplastic, a type of biodegradable plastic derived from biological
substances rather than petroleum, is indeed a solution. Not only is it cheaper
to make, but it also works to recycle waste material.
She spent
the following two years researching alternatives to petroleum-based plastic and
the current methods for producing bioplastic. Although there was a bioplastic
made from potatoes, Bilgin wanted to see if she could make plastic out of
organic waste material rather than using something that can be consumed. Banana
peels were the perfect solution as they are both high in starch and cellulose
and generally thrown out. After two years of developing her project and making
12 trial runs - with only the last two successful - Bilgin finally succeeded in
making a bioplastic from banana peels.
The process
she uses involves dipping the peel in sodium metabisulphite solution before
boiling and pureeing the peels. The resulting paste is then baked to create a
type of plastic that can easily be used as cable insulation or for cosmetic
prosthetics. "Anyone can use this plastic and our beautiful planet will be
spared from the consequences of the production of plastics with petroleum
derivatives," says Bilgin in the video that has gone viral, adding that in
the meantime, she has also perfected her recipe for banana splits and cupcakes.
Bilgin, who
is a junior at KoƧ High School, and for the past seven years has been attending
the Istanbul Science and Art Center for gifted students, submitted her project
titled, "Going Bananas! Using Banana Peels in the Production of Bioplastic
as a Replacement for Traditional Petroleum Based Plastic," to the 2013
Google Science Fair, with no hopes, she said, of being a finalist. Her project
not only won the Scientific American Magazine's Science in Action award of
$50,000 (TL 108,313) for being innovative, easy to put into action and
reproducible in other communities, but her work also drew in votes of support
from all over the world, winning her the Voter's Choice award of $10,000. Her
project has drawn great media attention worldwide since then and she has been
invited to speak at Google Zeitgeist America 2013, Tedx Vienna and Tedx
Istanbul. After high school, she hopes to study science and later become a
doctor of medicine.
Describing
herself as a hyperactive child that learned to read and write on her own by the
age of four, Bilgin says she loved asking questions about anything and
everything that she saw, so her parents bought her books on scientists and
inventors. During a talk at TEDxVienna in December, Bilgin described the first
invention she ever made, which were manual window wipers for her glasses in the
second grade. "After my little project I stepped into a world of unlimited
possibilities," says Bilgin, adding that she has always wanted to make a
difference in the world. In middle school, she went on to win awards for two
different projects, one on soilless farming and the other on designing a car
using wind energy to carry heavy objects. Bilgin said that as her world grew,
the problems she wanted to solve got bigger and harder.
Petroleum-
based plastics cause major issues for both human health and the environment.
The chemicals in these plastics seep into our food and water and have been
linked to various forms of cancer, never mind that they are also a major cause
of pollution in our oceans and landfills. Bilgin says she drew her inspiration
from Marie Curie, a female scientist who conducted pioneering research on
radioactivity, "while challenging gender norms along the way."
Curie was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the only woman to win in two fields and the only person to win in multiple sciences, namely physics and chemistry. Check out this intelligent, beautiful, charming and inspiring young Turkish girl, who is being discovered worldwide for her contribution to science. "I don't think that it is your age that determines the potential you have, it is the unlimited imagination you have that gives you the unlimited potential to create," says Bilgin.
Curie was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the only woman to win in two fields and the only person to win in multiple sciences, namely physics and chemistry. Check out this intelligent, beautiful, charming and inspiring young Turkish girl, who is being discovered worldwide for her contribution to science. "I don't think that it is your age that determines the potential you have, it is the unlimited imagination you have that gives you the unlimited potential to create," says Bilgin.
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