Irish Daily Mail

You won’t lose a drop of shampoo again

- By Colin Fernandez

SOME thrifty types cut open their bottles, while others just bin them – even though there is enough left for a thorough hair wash.

But now researcher­s have solved the dilemma of squeezing the last drops of shampoo out of a bottle.

They have created a lining that will allow soap to pour cleanly out of plastic containers, reducing waste and irritation.

The lining is made up of microscopi­c y-shaped quartz structures which, apparently, create air pockets that stop the shampoo touching the side of the bottle.

Inventors Bharat Bhushan and Philip Brown said the technique works on polypropyl­ene, a common plastic used to package foodstuffs and household goods.

Professor Bhushan said: ‘Coatings already exist to help food, but not soap, pour out of their containers. Compared to soaps, getting ketchup out of a bottle is trivial. Our coating repels liquids in general, but getting it to repel soap was the hard part.’

The shampoo bottle lining is said to be cheap, effective and environmen­tally friendly.

The quartz structures are only a few micrometer­s – millionths of a metre – across, are as hard as glass and are covered in even tinier branchlike projection­s. This means the soap is unable to spread across the lining and instead forms into beads which roll across its surface.

The invention could boost recycling as plastic bottles must currently be rinsed clean before they can be recycled.

Professor Bhushan, whose team at Ohio State University announced their discovery in the Philosophi­cal Transactio­ns of the Royal Society, said: ‘We all struggle with shampoo bottles. I have a few in my shower right now. Trying to get the last drop out, I put it upside down.’

He added: ‘My wife adds water to the bottle and she fights with it for a while, and then we give up and just throw it away.’

The Ohio scientists are not the only ones working on a solution to the plastic bottle problem.

Inventor Richard Fereday, 54, who was recently featured in this paper, is appealing on the crowdfundi­ng website Kickstarte­r for investors in his Flying Saucer, which promises to help diners empty their sauce bottles. The product works by placing a bottle, tube or jar in a cone-shaped holster. When the user swings the device in a windmill motion, centrifuga­l force draws the sauce into the gadget.

‘Give up and throw it away’

 ??  ?? ‘I don’t know what all the fuss is about’
‘I don’t know what all the fuss is about’

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