Reverse Engineering Plastics: Is It Cost Effective?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the feasibility of reverse engineering plastics, particularly in the context of environmental concerns regarding ocean pollution. The initial inquiry seeks to understand if certain types of plastics can be reverse engineered or if the costs are prohibitive. Clarification reveals that the term "reverse engineer" may be misunderstood; the focus is more on the degradation of plastics rather than their reproduction. It is noted that certain bacteria possess enzymes capable of breaking down plastics, which could be a potential solution to mitigate plastic waste. Resources are shared to provide further information on bacterial degradation of plastics, highlighting ongoing research in this area. The overarching goal is to educate and contribute to solutions for plastic pollution.
Derek lynch
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I would like to know if plastics can be reverse engineered or are the costs too significant .
 
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What is the context of your question? Do you mean ALL plastics? What is your goal?
 
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Hi thank you for the reply , yes with the state of ocean's and with plastic of all nature is there or is it plausible with the help of physics that plastics of certain types can or could be reverse engineered , I am aware that they have found enzymes that can eat plastic to degrade it ,my goal is to educate myself more about the subject and help if I can.
 
Derek lynch said:
Hi thank you for the reply , yes with the state of ocean's and with plastic of all nature is there or is it plausible with the help of physics that plastics of certain types can or could be reverse engineered , I am aware that they have found enzymes that can eat plastic to degrade it ,my goal is to educate myself more about the subject and help if I can.
I still don't understand. When you say "reverse engineer", In English, that means to learn exactly how the plastic was MADE so that you could make it yourself. I think that is not what you mean, yes? You mean how can you DESTROY plastic (turn it into something not harmful), yes?
 
Some bacteria species haves enzymes that make all sorts of degrading kinds of changes to plastic.

Here is an review article on bacterial degradation of plastic:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/academia.edu.documents/9916223/shah-biological_degradation_of_plastics_a_comprehensive_review.pdf?AWSAccessKeyId=AKIAIWOWYYGZ2Y53UL3A&Expires=1546135205&Signature=f%2BB9HsDzf9vXL%2BaGNq%2FO6%2F06zwQ%3D&response-content-disposition=inline%3B%20filename%3DBiological_degradation_of_plastics_a_com.pdf

less technical:
https://arstechnica.com/science/2016/03/does-newly-discovered-bacteria-recycle-plastic/
 
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