Plastic Scanner device that identifies which plastics can actually be recycled wins Dyson Award

2021 Dyson Award winner offers low-cost method of instantly testing materials

Anthony Cuthbertson
Tuesday 16 November 2021 19:01 EST
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The Plastic Scanner is a low-cost device capable of identifying what can and can’t be recycled
The Plastic Scanner is a low-cost device capable of identifying what can and can’t be recycled (Plastic Scanner)

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A hand-held device capable of instantly identifying whether a plastic is suitable for recycling has been named among the winners of the 2021 Dyson Awards.

The Plastic Scanner offers a low-cost method of testing materials, with the hope that it will help to reduce landfill waste.

Designed by Jerry de Vos at Deft University in the Netherlands, the Plastic Scanner uses infrared light to detect plastic components and assess whether they are able to be recycled.

It uses open-source hardware to make the same technology used in European sorting facilities available to anyone capable of assembling the electronics into a device.

“Discrete near-infrared spectroscopy makes it possible to identify over 75 per cent of all plastic used in everyday life,” Mr de Vos explained. “Therefore, it became my mission to make this technology accessible to recyclers in low and middle-income countries.”

The Plastic Scanner was one of three winners of the 2021 awards, which were set up by vacuum cleaner tycoon James Dyson in order to honour the next generation of design engineers.

“It may be fashionable to demonise plastic but it is a durable and versatile material which has an important role to play,” said Dyson.

“The challenge, of course, is ensuring it is reused and recycled effectively to avoid it going to landfill. Understanding how to recycle plastics correctly is complicated but Jerry has developed a very effective technology that could put this knowledge into everyone’s hands.”

The winner of the medical category of the Dyson Awards was 22-year-old Joseph Bentley from Loughborough University, who invented a life-saving device to stem blood loss from knife wounds.

The Rapid Emergency Actuating Tamponade, or React, allows non-medically trained police officers to stop bleeding within 60 seconds by inflating a medical-grade silicone balloon inside the wound.

Designer Joseph Bentley demonstrating how to use his React device
Designer Joseph Bentley demonstrating how to use his React device (Loughborough University)

Previous winners of the Dyson Award include a bio-reactive food label called Bump Mark, which uses gelatine in order to tangibly show when a food product is going off.

It has since morphed into the company Mimica, which aims to use the technology to reduce food waste.

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