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Malaysian Researchers Turn Pineapple Leaves Into Strong, Lightweight, Biodegradable Drones
A fiber extracted from waste products produced in pineapple farming could be key to sustainable, environmentally-friendly drones.
A team of researchers in Malaysia is turning waste products of the pineapple industry into a bio-composite material strong enough to create parts for drones which are stronger, cheaper, and easier to dispose of than their existing counterparts. We are transforming the leaf of the pineapple into a fiber that can be used for aerospace application, project lead Professor Mohamed Thariq Hameed Sultan of Malaysia s Putra University explained in a workshop attended by Reuters, basically inventing a drone.
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Reuters Reuters
6 January, 2021, 11:09 am
A drone, partially made with pineapple stems, flies at a pineapple plantation in Jenjarom, Malaysia December 12, 2020. Picture taken December 12, 2020. REUTERS/Lim Huey Teng
BANGI, Malaysia (Reuters) – Malaysian researchers have developed a method to transform the fibre found in normally discarded pineapple leaves to make a strong material that can be used to build the frames for unmanned aircraft, or drones.
The project, headed by Professor Mohamed Thariq Hameed Sultan at Malaysia’s Putra University, has been trying to find sustainable uses for pineapple waste generated by farmers in Hulu Langat, an area about 65 km (40 miles) from Kuala Lumpur.
Tuna goes for $200,000 at Tokyo market's New Year auction A bluefin tuna sold for 20.8 million yen ($202,197) in the first auction of the new year at Tokyo's Toyosu fish market on Tuesday when it reopened after the holiday break.
This was sharply down from the 193 million yen the highest-selling tuna fetched at last year's first Toyosu auction.