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Recycling “tiny trash”

New study suggests cigarette butts may have a 2nd life

Cigarette butts,” one of the most widespread forms of garbage in the world,” may find practical use as a new way to prevent steel corrosion. Credit: iStock
Cigarette butts,” one of the most widespread forms of garbage in the world,” may find practical use as a new way to prevent steel corrosion. Credit: iStock

 A new study which recently appeared in American Chemical Society's bi-weekly journal, Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, suggests there may be benefits to the expansion of community recycling programs beyond newspapers, beverage containers, and other traditional waste to include an unlikely new potential treasure: cigarette butts. Terming this tiny trash “one of the most ubiquitous forms of garbage in the world,” the new study describes the discovery of a way to reuse the remains of cigarettes to prevent steel corrosion that costs oil producers millions of dollars annually. The study is entitled: “Cigarette Butts and Their Application in Corrosion Inhibition for N80 Steel at 90°C in a Hydrochloric Acid Solution" and can be found at www.acs.org.

Jun Zhao and his colleagues who were involved in the study cite one estimate that 4.5 trillion cigarette butts find their way into the environment each year. And their studies show that cigarette butts are more than an eyesore. They contain toxins that can kill fish and harm the environment in other ways. Recycling could solve those problems, but finding practical uses for cigarette butts has been difficult.    The scientists showed that extracts of cigarette butts in water, applied to a type of steel (N80) widely used in the oil industry, protected the steel from rusting even under the harsh conditions, preventing costly damage and interruptions in oil production. They identified nine chemicals in the extracts, including nicotine, which appear to be responsible for this anti-corrosion effect.   American Chemical Society   www.acs.org