A plan to recycle the unrecyclable Ashton Cofer

It was just an ordinary Saturday.

My dad was outside mowing the lawn,

my mom was upstairs folding laundry,

my sister was in her room doing homework

and I was in the basement
playing video games.

And as I came upstairs
to get something to drink,

I looked out the window

and realized that there was something
that I was supposed to be doing,

and this is what I saw.

No, this wasn’t
my family’s dinner on fire.

This was my science project.

Flames were pouring out,

smoke was in the air

and it looked like our wooden deck
was about to catch fire.

I immediately started yelling.

My mom was freaking out,

my dad ran around to put out the fire

and of course my sister
started recording a Snapchat video.

(Laughter)

This was just the beginning
of my team’s science project.

My team is composed of me
and three other students

who are here in the audience today.

We competed in FIRST LEGO League

which is an international
LEGO robotics competition for kids,

and in addition to a robotics game,

we also worked
on a separate science project,

and this was the project
that we were working on.

So the idea for this project all started

when a few months earlier,

a couple of my teammates
took a trip to Central America

and saw beaches littered with Styrofoam,

or expanded polystyrene foam.

And when they came back
and told us about it,

we really started thinking about the ways
in which we see Styrofoam every day.

Get a new flat-screen TV?

You end up with a block of Styrofoam
bigger than the TV itself.

Drink a cup of coffee?

Well, those Styrofoam coffee cups
are sure going to add up.

And where do all these items go
after their one-time use?

Since there aren’t any good
existing solutions for used Styrofoam,

almost all of them
end up right in the landfill,

or the oceans and beaches,

taking over 500 years to degrade.

And in fact, every year, the US alone

produces over two billion
pounds of Styrofoam,

filling up a staggering
25 percent of landfills.

So why do we have these ghost
accumulations of Styrofoam waste?

Why can’t we just recycle them
like many plastics?

Well, simply put, recycled
polystyrene is too expensive

and potentially contaminated,

so there is very little market demand
for Styrofoam that has to be recycled.

And as a result, Styrofoam
is considered a nonrenewable material,

because it is neither feasible
nor viable to recycle polystyrene.

And in fact, many cities across the US

have even passed ordinances

that simply ban the production
of many products containing polystyrene,

which includes disposable utensils,

packing peanuts, takeout containers

and even plastic beach toys,

all products that are very useful
in today’s society.

And now France
has become the first country

to completely ban all plastic utensils,

cups and plates.

But what if we could keep using Styrofoam

and keep benefiting
from its cheap, lightweight, insulating

and excellent packing ability,

while not having to suffer
from the repercussions

of having to dispose of it?

What if we could turn it into
something else that’s actually useful?

What if we could make
the impossible possible?

My team hypothesized that we could use
the carbon that’s already in Styrofoam

to create activated carbon,

which is used in almost
every water filter today.

And activated carbon works
by using very small micropores

to filter out contaminants
from water or even air.

So we started out
by doing a variety of heating tests,

and unfortunately, we had many failures.

Literally, nothing worked.

Besides my dad’s grill catching on fire,

most of our samples
vaporized into nothing,

or exploded inside expensive furnaces,

leaving a horribly sticky mess.

In fact, we were so saddened
by our failures that we almost gave up.

So why did we keep trying

when all the adults
said it was impossible?

Well, maybe it’s because we’re kids.
We don’t know any better.

But the truth is, we kept trying
because we thought it was still possible.

We knew that if we were successful,

we would be helping the environment
and making the world a better place.

So we kept trying

and failing

and trying

and failing.

We were so ready to give up.

But then it happened.

With the right temperatures,
times and chemicals,

we finally got that successful test result

showing us that we had created
activated carbon from Styrofoam waste.

And at that moment,
the thing that had been impossible

all of a sudden wasn’t.

It showed us that although we had
many failures at the beginning,

we were able to persevere through them
to get the test results that we wanted.

And moreover, not only were we able
to create activated carbon

for purifying water,

but we were also able
to reduce Styrofoam waste,

solving two global problems
with just one solution.

So from then on, we were inspired
to take our project further,

performing more tests
to make it more effective

and testing it in real world situations.

We then proceeded to receive funding

from the NSTA’s eCYBERMISSION
STEM-in-Action program

sponsored by the US Army,

as well as FIRST Global Innovation Awards

sponsored by XPRIZE.

And we were also honored

with the Scientific American
Innovator Award

from Google Science Fair.

And using these funds, we plan
to file a full patent on our process

and to continue to work on our project.

So yes, although we started
with catching my dad’s grill on fire

and failing so many times
that we almost quit,

it was well worth it
when we look back at it now.

We took a problem
that many people said was impossible

and we made it possible,

and we persevered when it looked
like nothing that we did would work.

We learned that you can’t have success

without a little,

or a lot, of failure.

So in the future, don’t be afraid
if your grill goes up in flames,

because you never know
when your idea might just catch fire.

Thank you.

(Applause)

这只是一个普通的星期六。

我爸爸在外面修剪草坪,

我妈妈在楼上叠衣服,

我姐姐在她的房间里做作业

,我在地下室
玩电子游戏。

当我上楼
去喝点东西时,

我看着窗外


意识到我应该做一些事情

,这就是我所看到的。

不,这不是
我家人的晚餐。

这是我的科学项目。

火焰倾泻而出,

空气中弥漫着烟雾

,看起来我们的木
甲板要着火了。

我立刻开始大喊大叫。

我妈妈吓坏了,

我爸爸跑来扑灭大火

,当然我姐姐
开始录制 Snapchat 视频。

(笑声)

这只是
我团队科学项目的开始。

我的团队由我

今天在座的其他三名学生组成。

我们参加了 FIRST LEGO League

,这是一个
面向儿童的国际乐高机器人竞赛

,除了机器人游戏,

我们还
参与了一个单独的科学项目

,这
就是我们正在开展的项目。

所以这个项目的想法

始于几个月前,

我的几个队友
去中美洲旅行

,看到海滩上散落着聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料

或膨胀聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料。

当他们
回来告诉我们这件事时,

我们真的开始思考
我们每天看到聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料的方式。

买一台新的平板电视?

你最终会得到一块
比电视本身还大的聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料。

喝一杯咖啡?

好吧,那些聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料
咖啡杯肯定会加起来。

所有这些物品
在一次性使用后会去哪里?

由于
使用过的聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料没有任何好的现有解决方案,

几乎所有这些
最终都直接进入垃圾填埋场

或海洋和海滩,

需要 500 多年才能降解。

事实上,仅美国每年就

生产超过 20 亿
磅的聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料,

占垃圾填埋场的 25%。

那么为什么我们会有这些
聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料垃圾的幽灵堆积呢?

为什么我们不能
像许多塑料一样回收它们?

嗯,简单地说,回收的
聚苯乙烯太贵

而且可能受到污染,

所以市场
对必须回收的聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料的需求很小。

因此,聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料
被认为是一种不可再生材料,

因为
回收聚苯乙烯既不可行也不可行。

事实上,美国许多城市

甚至通过了法令

,简单地禁止
生产许多含有聚苯乙烯的产品,

其中包括一次性餐具、

包装花生、外卖容器

甚至塑料沙滩玩具,

这些产品
在当今社会非常有用。

而现在法国
已经成为第

一个完全禁止所有塑料餐具、

杯子和盘子的国家。

但是,如果我们可以继续使用聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料,

并继续
受益于其廉价、轻便、绝缘

和出色的包装能力,

而不必承受

不得不处理它的后果,那又会怎样呢?

如果我们可以把它变成
其他真正有用的东西呢?

如果我们可以
让不可能变为可能呢?

我的团队假设我们可以使用
聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料中已有的碳

来制造活性炭

,如今几乎每个滤水器都使用这种活性炭

活性炭
通过使用非常小的微孔

来过滤
水甚至空气中的污染物。

所以我们
开始做各种加热测试

,不幸的是,我们有很多失败。

从字面上看,没有任何效果。

除了我父亲的烤架着火之外,

我们的大多数样品都
蒸发成无物,

或者在昂贵的熔炉中爆炸,

留下一团可怕的黏糊糊的东西。

事实上,我们对失败感到非常
难过,以至于我们几乎放弃了。

那么,

当所有的成年人
都说不可能的时候,我们为什么还要继续尝试呢?

嗯,也许是因为我们是孩子。
我们不知道更好。

但事实是,我们一直在尝试,
因为我们认为这仍然是可能的。

我们知道,如果我们成功了,

我们将帮助环境
,让世界变得更美好。

所以我们不断地尝试

和失败

,不断地尝试

和失败。

我们已经准备好放弃了。

但后来它发生了。

通过正确的温度、
时间和化学品,

我们最终获得了成功的测试结果,

表明我们已经
从聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料废料中制造出活性炭。

而那一刻
,原本不可能的事情

一下子就没有了。

它告诉我们,虽然我们
一开始有很多失败,但

我们能够坚持下来
,得到我们想要的测试结果。

此外,我们不仅
能够制造

用于净化水的活性炭,

而且还
能够减少聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料的浪费,仅用一种解决方案就

解决了两个全球性问题

因此,从那时起,我们受到启发
,进一步推进我们的项目,

进行更多测试
以使其更有效

,并在现实世界中对其进行测试。

然后,我们继续从美国陆军赞助

的 NSTA 的 eCYBERMISSION
STEM-in-Action 计划

以及 XPRIZE 赞助的 FIRST 全球创新奖中获得资金

我们还获得

了 Google Science Fair 颁发的《科学美国人》
创新奖

使用这些资金,我们计划
为我们的工艺申请完整的专利,

并继续开展我们的项目。

所以,是的,虽然我们一开始就把
我爸爸的烤架着火了,

而且失败了很多次
,以至于我们几乎放弃了,

但当我们现在回头看时,这是非常值得的。

我们解决了一个
很多人认为不可能的问题

,我们使之成为可能,


看起来我们所做的任何事情都行不通时,我们坚持了下来。

我们了解到,如果

没有一点点

或很多点的失败,你就无法取得成功。

所以在未来,
如果你的烤架着火了,不要害怕,

因为你永远不
知道你的想法什么时候会着火。

谢谢你。

(掌声)