A brief history of plastic

1,253,785 views ・ 2020-09-10

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
Today, plastics are everywhere.
0
7117
2960
00:10
All of this plastic originated from one small object—
1
10077
4831
00:14
that isn’t even made of plastic.
2
14908
3050
00:17
For centuries, billiard balls were made of ivory from elephant tusks.
3
17958
4377
00:22
But when excessive hunting caused elephant populations to decline
4
22335
3900
00:26
in the 19th century,
5
26235
1370
00:27
billiard balls makers began to look for alternatives, offering huge rewards.
6
27605
5693
00:33
So in 1863 an American named John Wesley Hyatt took up the challenge.
7
33298
6372
00:39
Over the next five years, he invented a new material called celluloid,
8
39670
6029
00:45
made from cellulose, a compound found in wood and straw.
9
45699
5185
00:50
Hyatt soon discovered celluloid couldn’t solve the billiard ball problem––
10
50884
4208
00:55
the material wasn’t heavy enough and didn’t bounce quite right.
11
55092
4000
00:59
But it could be tinted and patterned
12
59092
2800
01:01
to mimic more expensive materials like coral,
13
61892
3480
01:05
tortoiseshell, amber, and mother-of-pearl.
14
65372
3520
01:08
He had created what became known as the first plastic.
15
68892
4807
01:13
The word ‘plastic’ can describe any material made of polymers,
16
73699
4380
01:18
which are just the large molecules consisting of the same repeating subunit.
17
78079
4844
01:22
This includes all human-made plastics,
18
82923
2540
01:25
as well as many of the materials found in living things.
19
85463
3390
01:28
But in general, when people refer to plastics,
20
88853
3140
01:31
they’re referring to synthetic materials.
21
91993
2580
01:34
The unifying feature of these is that they start out soft and malleable
22
94573
4490
01:39
and can be molded into a particular shape.
23
99063
3160
01:42
Despite taking the prize as the first official plastic,
24
102223
4107
01:46
celluloid was highly flammable, which made production risky.
25
106330
4538
01:50
So inventors began to hunt for alternatives.
26
110868
3100
01:53
In 1907 a chemist combined phenol—
27
113968
3450
01:57
a waste product of coal tar—
28
117418
2290
01:59
and formaldehyde, creating a hardy new polymer called bakelite.
29
119708
5255
02:04
Bakelite was much less flammable than celluloid and the raw materials
30
124963
4229
02:09
used to make it were more readily available.
31
129192
3480
02:12
Bakelite was only the beginning.
32
132672
2220
02:14
In the 1920s, researchers first commercially developed polystyrene,
33
134892
5041
02:19
a spongy plastic used in insulation.
34
139933
3170
02:23
Soon after came polyvinyl chloride, or vinyl, which was flexible yet hardy.
35
143103
6278
02:29
Acrylics created transparent,
36
149381
2110
02:31
shatter-proof panels that mimicked glass.
37
151491
3240
02:34
And in the 1930s nylon took centre stage—
38
154731
3830
02:38
a polymer designed to mimic silk, but with many times its strength.
39
158561
4405
02:42
Starting in 1933, polyethylene became one of the most versatile plastics,
40
162966
5954
02:48
still used today to make everything from grocery bags, to shampoo bottles,
41
168920
4894
02:53
to bulletproof vests.
42
173814
2250
02:56
New manufacturing technologies accompanied this explosion of materials.
43
176064
4277
03:00
The invention of a technique called injection-moulding
44
180341
3830
03:04
made it possible to insert melted plastics into molds of any shape,
45
184171
4648
03:08
where they would rapidly harden.
46
188819
2120
03:10
This created possibilities for products in new varieties and shapes—
47
190939
4196
03:15
and a way to inexpensively and rapidly produce plastics at scale.
48
195135
5555
03:20
Scientists hoped this economical new material
49
200690
3160
03:23
would make items that once had been unaffordable accessible to more people.
50
203850
5039
03:28
Instead, plastics were pushed into service in World War Two.
51
208889
4304
03:33
During the war, plastic production in the United States quadrupled.
52
213193
4826
03:38
Soldiers wore new plastic helmet liners and water-resistant vinyl raincoats.
53
218019
5487
03:43
Pilots sat in cockpits made of plexiglass, a shatterproof plastic,
54
223506
4744
03:48
and relied on parachutes made of resilient nylon.
55
228250
4470
03:52
Afterwards, plastic manufacturing companies
56
232720
2350
03:55
that had sprung up during wartime turned their attention to consumer products.
57
235070
4683
03:59
Plastics began to replace other materials like wood, glass, and fabric
58
239753
5100
04:04
in furniture, clothing, shoes, televisions, and radios.
59
244853
4908
04:09
Versatile plastics opened up possibilities for packaging—
60
249761
4000
04:13
mainly designed to keep food and other products fresh for longer.
61
253761
4382
04:18
Suddenly, there were plastic garbage bags, stretchy plastic wrap,
62
258143
4390
04:22
squeezable plastic bottles, takeaway cartons,
63
262533
3230
04:25
and plastic containers for fruit, vegetables, and meat.
64
265763
4657
04:30
Within just a few decades, this multifaceted material
65
270420
4000
04:34
ushered in what became known as the “plastics century.”
66
274420
4000
04:38
While the plastics century brought convenience and cost-effectiveness,
67
278420
3660
04:42
it also created staggering environmental problems.
68
282080
3590
04:45
Many plastics are made of nonrenewable resources.
69
285670
3240
04:48
And plastic packaging was designed to be single-use,
70
288910
3850
04:52
but some plastics take centuries to decompose,
71
292760
3390
04:56
creating a huge build up of waste.
72
296150
3490
04:59
This century we’ll have to concentrate our innovations on addressing those problems—
73
299640
4901
05:04
by reducing plastic use, developing biodegradable plastics,
74
304541
4177
05:08
and finding new ways to recycle existing plastic.
75
308718
4000

Original video on YouTube.com
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7