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May 17, 2010

Researchers find use for recycled cigarette butts

 

Some researchers have found a good use for those billions of cigarette butts that line our streets and generally foul our environment.

They can be recycled into an anti-corrosive agent for steel, according to the researchers in the American Chemical Society's March issue of Industrial & Engineering Chemisty Research.

"Cigarette butts, one of the most ubiquitous forms of garbage in the world, have been found to be toxic to saltwater and freshwater fish," the researchers write. "Still, humans are inadvertently carpeting the planet in cigarette butts. That is billions of cigarettes flicked, one at a time, on our sidewalks, beaches, nature trails, gardens, and other public places every single day."

The article says one estimate is that 4.5 trillion cigarette butts are cast off into the environment every year. And while some states and cities have moved to ban smoking on beaches, there doesn't seem to be much impact and there havn't been reports about how to reuse them.

The researchers took discarded butts from cigarettes made in Virginia, ran some water through them and mixed what was extracted with hydrochloric acid in different concentrations until the found the best anti-corrosive agent.

With all the smoking bans in effect, including in Maryland, the would need only go outside any bar to find a ready supply of material.

Baltimore Sun file photo/Karl Merton Ferron

Posted by Meredith Cohn at 7:00 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Recycling
        

Comments

Maybe we need a "butt bill" so that people will stop tossing their butts wherever they want (I had one thrown at me the other night) and will take them back for a deposit refund.
I'm sure the nicotine addicts would hate that but they buy cigarettes frequently so it wouldn't be that much of a burden. Plus, it could be a new use for all those pretty cigarette cases.

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About the bloggers
Tim WheelerTim Wheeler reports on the environment and Chesapeake Bay. A native of West Virginia, he has focused mainly on Maryland's environment since moving here in 1983. Along the way, he's crewed aboard a skipjack in the bay, canoed under city streets up the Jones Fall from the Inner Harbor, and gone deep underground in a western Maryland coal mine. He loves seafood, rambles in the country and good stories. He hopes to share some here.

Contributor Christy Zuccarini has been blogging about the local DIY craft scene for a year for Baltimoresun.com. She brings her pespective on all things handmade to B'More Green, where she will highlight projects you can do yourself as well as crafters who are integrating sustainable methods and materials.
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