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A woman wears "The Plant Bag", a backpack fitted with a breathing mask connected to the pack which contains a plant on January 18, 2016 in Delft (AFP Photo) |
The Hague
(AFP) - Five Dutch students have hit on a unique idea to replace face masks
used against air pollution, and are developing a "plant backpack" to
give wearers instant fresh air.
"The
bag allows fine particles to be filtered out and cleans the air," said
Marnix de Kroon, the leader of the team.
"The
Plant Bag" is fitted with a filter which takes in the outside air and
sifts it through the roots of a plant housed inside the backpack before allowing
the wearer to breathe it in.
Even though
the idea is still in early stages, it won a Dutch design competition, and the
students at TU Delft University have moved to the next stage of making a
prototype.
"We
are testing which plant will work the best, and it seems that aloe vera may be
a possibility," De Kroon told AFP.
However, an
expert from the Netherlands weather institute said such a design would not be
very useful.
"The
filter alone will sift out 99.9 percent of the fine particles," the Dutch
daily Trouw quoted the expert as saying.
De Kroon
however insists that the plant will catch the smallest of the microscopic
particles which can penetrate deep into the lungs and trigger varying health
problems.
"This
product may not take off very quickly in Europe, but cities like Beijing and
Tehran, cities with serious pollution problems, will be our main market,"
he said.
In
December, Beijing issued its first red pollution alert when levels of PM2.5
particles reached 350 micrograms per cubic metres. The World Health
Organisation's recommended maximum exposure is 25.
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