Washington: Plastic trash may one day help people fly as researchers have found a way to turn daily plastic waste products into jet fuel.
"There is a lot of hydrogen in plastics, which is a key component in fuel," said Hanwu Lei, Associate Professor at the Washington State University in the US.
To produce jet fuel, the researchers melted plastic waste at high temperature with activated carbon.
"This is a very good, and relatively simple, way to recycle these plastics," Lei said.
For the study, the research team tested low-density polyethylene and mixed a variety of waste plastic products like water bottles, milk bottles, plastic bags and ground them down to around three millimetres, or about the size of a grain of rice.
Read more:Government creating 50,000 tonne of onion buffer to curb price rise
During the research, the plastic granules were then placed on top of activated carbon in a tube reactor at a high temperature, ranging from 430 degree Celsius to 571 degrees Celsius.