A brief history of plastic

1,236,996 views ・ 2020-09-10

TED-Ed


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

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Today, plastics are everywhere.
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All of this plastic originated from one small object—
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that isn’t even made of plastic.
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For centuries, billiard balls were made of ivory from elephant tusks.
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But when excessive hunting caused elephant populations to decline
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in the 19th century,
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billiard balls makers began to look for alternatives, offering huge rewards.
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So in 1863 an American named John Wesley Hyatt took up the challenge.
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Over the next five years, he invented a new material called celluloid,
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made from cellulose, a compound found in wood and straw.
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Hyatt soon discovered celluloid couldn’t solve the billiard ball problem––
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the material wasn’t heavy enough and didn’t bounce quite right.
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But it could be tinted and patterned
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to mimic more expensive materials like coral,
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tortoiseshell, amber, and mother-of-pearl.
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He had created what became known as the first plastic.
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The word ‘plastic’ can describe any material made of polymers,
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which are just the large molecules consisting of the same repeating subunit.
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This includes all human-made plastics,
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as well as many of the materials found in living things.
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But in general, when people refer to plastics,
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they’re referring to synthetic materials.
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The unifying feature of these is that they start out soft and malleable
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and can be molded into a particular shape.
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Despite taking the prize as the first official plastic,
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celluloid was highly flammable, which made production risky.
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So inventors began to hunt for alternatives.
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In 1907 a chemist combined phenol—
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a waste product of coal tar—
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and formaldehyde, creating a hardy new polymer called bakelite.
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Bakelite was much less flammable than celluloid and the raw materials
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used to make it were more readily available.
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Bakelite was only the beginning.
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In the 1920s, researchers first commercially developed polystyrene,
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a spongy plastic used in insulation.
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Soon after came polyvinyl chloride, or vinyl, which was flexible yet hardy.
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Acrylics created transparent,
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shatter-proof panels that mimicked glass.
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And in the 1930s nylon took centre stage—
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a polymer designed to mimic silk, but with many times its strength.
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Starting in 1933, polyethylene became one of the most versatile plastics,
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still used today to make everything from grocery bags, to shampoo bottles,
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to bulletproof vests.
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New manufacturing technologies accompanied this explosion of materials.
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The invention of a technique called injection-moulding
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made it possible to insert melted plastics into molds of any shape,
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where they would rapidly harden.
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This created possibilities for products in new varieties and shapes—
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and a way to inexpensively and rapidly produce plastics at scale.
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Scientists hoped this economical new material
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would make items that once had been unaffordable accessible to more people.
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Instead, plastics were pushed into service in World War Two.
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During the war, plastic production in the United States quadrupled.
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Soldiers wore new plastic helmet liners and water-resistant vinyl raincoats.
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Pilots sat in cockpits made of plexiglass, a shatterproof plastic,
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and relied on parachutes made of resilient nylon.
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Afterwards, plastic manufacturing companies
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that had sprung up during wartime turned their attention to consumer products.
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Plastics began to replace other materials like wood, glass, and fabric
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in furniture, clothing, shoes, televisions, and radios.
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Versatile plastics opened up possibilities for packaging—
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mainly designed to keep food and other products fresh for longer.
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Suddenly, there were plastic garbage bags, stretchy plastic wrap,
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squeezable plastic bottles, takeaway cartons,
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and plastic containers for fruit, vegetables, and meat.
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Within just a few decades, this multifaceted material
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ushered in what became known as the “plastics century.”
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While the plastics century brought convenience and cost-effectiveness,
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it also created staggering environmental problems.
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Many plastics are made of nonrenewable resources.
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And plastic packaging was designed to be single-use,
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but some plastics take centuries to decompose,
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creating a huge build up of waste.
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This century we’ll have to concentrate our innovations on addressing those problems—
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by reducing plastic use, developing biodegradable plastics,
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and finding new ways to recycle existing plastic.
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