Ink made of air pollution Anirudh Sharma

Translator: Maricene Crus
Reviewer: Cihan Ekmekçi

Every year, more than four
to five million people die

due to exposure to outdoor air pollution

around the world.

This petri dish that you are looking at

contains approximately
20 minutes' worth of pollution

captured off a pyrolysis plant.

This is PM 2.5.

These particles –
you can see it right now,

but when they’re out there
in the air, you won’t see them.

These are so tiny that our lungs –

our bodies cannot filter them,
and they end up in our bodies –

give us asthma and lung cancer
if not treated in the right time.

On a trip back to India,
when I was a student in 2012,

I took this picture.

This picture stuck in my head.

On one side, you see this exhaust
of a diesel generator,

the same generator
which is a sign of human progress,

which is a sign of rapid industrialization

and what we have become
as a society in the last 100 years,

generating energy.

But on the other side,

you see this very interesting
triangular, black-colored swatch,

that is produced by the same
residual particulate waste

created by the emissions of the generator.

Now, this picture gave me an idea

and got me thinking about rethinking
both pollution and inks,

because it was making
that black-colored mark.

Now, the reality is that most of the black
ink that we use conventionally

is traditionally produced

by conventionally burning
fossil fuels in factories.

There are factories around the world
that are burning fossil fuels

to produce carbon black,

to make black inks that we use
on an everyday basis.

But given that millions
of liters of fossil fuels

are already being burned out there

by our cars, our engines
and our exhaust out there,

what if you could capture that pollution

and use it to recycle and make those inks?

I decided to give this experiment a shot.

I went back to my lab back in Boston
and conducted a small experiment.

In Boston, I couldn’t find
much pollution to play with,

so I resorted to using a candle.

This was an experiment.

I burnt a candle,

built this contraption
that would suck in that candle soot,

mixed it with some
vegetable oil and vodka,

because to a DIY hacker,
these were really easily available.

(Laughter)

And after mixing them,

you could churn out
a very rudimentary form of ink

that would go into a cartridge,

and now you could print with it.

This was my “Hello, World!”
of experimenting

with printing with pollution.

This is the same pollution
that I showed you in the petri dish,

which is the result of any fossil fuel
that is being burned out there.

In 2015, I decided to take
this experimentation forward

and set up a lab in India

to work on the capture and recycling
of air pollution.

In the good times, the lab
used to look something like this.

But experimentations
were not always controlled,

and disasters happened.

And while experimentation would happen,

the lab would end up
looking something like this.

Well, we knew where we wanted to go,

but we were not sure
how exactly to reach there.

The passersby who used to go
by that lab through that building

used to, at times, think,
“These guys are making bombs in there,”

because there was too much fire,
wires and smoke in the same vicinity.

(Laughter)

We decided, let’s move to a garage
and take experiments forward.

We took a garage,
and during the early stages,

we were driving around Bangalore
with contraptions like these.

This is an early-stage prototype.

Imagine the looks people gave us,

“What are these cars
driving around doing?”

This is an early-stage prototype
of our system that would capture pollution

that is being released from
a conventional diesel-based car.

This is an early stage of the technology.

We advanced the technology
and created this into this version

that would capture pollution
from static sources of pollution,

like a diesel generator.

If you see, all the fumes disappear
as soon as you turn this machine on.

Without affecting
the performance of the engine,

we are able to capture
95 percent worth of pollution

released from the diesel generator.

This is the particulate matter
that we are talking about that we capture,

in this case, within three to four hours
of operation of a generator.

And while our experiments
and our research was advancing,

a very big company, a very big brand,
approached us and said,

“We want to take this idea
further with you guys,

and take this further
in a very big celebrated form.”

They said, “Let’s do a global art campaign

with the inks that you are making
off this pollution.”

I’ll show you what the ink looks like.

So, this pen is made by recycling
40 to 50 minutes of that car pollution

that we are talking about,

the same pollution
that is in the petri dish.

And it’s a very sharp black
that you can write with.

So I’m going to write …

PM 2.5, that’s incorrect.

So this is a very sharp black
that is generated by the same pollution.

After much work on the lab-level research,

we got an offer from a big corporation
to do a very big trial of this idea.

And it happened to be a brand,
and we didn’t think twice.

We said, “Let’s go ahead.”

Inventing in the lab is one thing

and taking ideas and deploying them
in the real world is completely another.

During early stages,

we had to resort to using
our own houses and own kitchens

as our ink-making factories,

and our own bedrooms and living rooms

as the first assembly line
for making these inks.

This is my cofounder Nikhil’s own bedroom,

that is being used to supply inks
to artists all around the world,

who would paint with AIR-INK.

And that’s him, delivering
AIR-INKs to the ports

so that the artists
around the world can use it.

Soon, we started seeing

that thousands of artists around the world
started using AIR-INK,

and artworks started emerging like this.

Soon, thousands of black-and-white,
pollution-made artworks

started emerging on a global scale.

And believe me, for a group
of scientists and engineers and inventors,

there was nothing more satisfying
than that the product of their work

is now being used by some
of the finest artists around the world.

This is the cover of “Contagious”
magazine last year,

that was done by using the same ink
that we made back in our labs.

This is a famous painting
by the British artist, Christian Furr,

who painted it for the song
“Paint It Black” by The Rolling Stones.

Now, there’s more to this pen and this ink

than just the popular
and pop-culture artworks.

And now our goal is to create a company

that can actually make some black money –
I mean, just money –

(Laughter)

and high-quality printing
processes and inks

that can replace
the conventional black inks

that have been produced for the last
thousands of years around the world.

Soon after our growing popularity
and artworks around the world,

we started facing a very different
kind of a problem.

We started getting spammed by polluters,

who would send us bags full of pollution
to our office address,

asking us, “What can we do
with this pollution?”

Our lab back in Bombay right now
has pollution samples

that have come from London,
from India, from China, you name it.

And this is just the beginning.

This polluter sent us
this specific image, asking us

that these are all bags
filled with PM 2.5,

and can we recycle it for him
if we paid him some money.

Well, what would he have done
if we did not take that pollution?

He would probably find a nearby river
or a landfill and dump it over there.

But now, because we had the economics
of AIR-INK figured out on the other side,

we could incentivize him to give us
this pollution and make inks from it,

and turn it into even
more valuable products.

Now, pollution, as we all know,
is a global killer.

We can’t claim that our ink
will solve the world’s pollution problem.

But it does show what can be done

if you look at this problem
slightly differently.

Look at this T-shirt
I’m holding right now.

This is made from the same
AIR-INK I’m talking about.

It’s made from the same pollution
that is inside this petri dish.

And the same pollution we are all
breathing in when we are walking outdoors.

And we are on our way
to do better than this.

Thank you very much.

(Applause)