Washington, Feb 21 (ANI): Scientists warn that toxic glass from old-style television sets and computer monitors, popularly known as "boob tubes", could end up polluting landfills if new uses for them are not found soon.
Technically speaking, a "boob tube" is a funnel-shaped device known as a cathode ray tube, which can be found inside an old TV.
Cathode ray tubes, or CRTs, are made of heavy leaded glass, which is used to block harmful X-rays produced by the tube's cathode ray guns.
The leaded glass is categorized as hazardous waste in Europe and most of America.
Fortunately, demand for old CRTs is high in developing nations such as China and India, where they are recycled to create the raw material for building new TVs.
But as plasma and LED TV displays get cheaper, demand for CRT televisions will likely drop in developing countries, according to analysts.
Eventually, the amount of CRT "cullet" - the crushed remains of trashed cathode ray tubes that are recycled - will outstrip demand, and the toxic screens will end up in landfills, explained Jeremy Gregory, a research scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a co-author of a new paper on CRT recycling.
Gregory predicts this flip-flop in supply and demand will happen in a decade or less.
The study used data on CRT sales and recycling to forecast the future of this dying technology.
"What we were trying to look at was basically, what was the supply and the demand for this end-of-life CRT cullet," said Gregory.
"The solution for keeping CRTs out of landfills is to find new ways to use CRT cullet," he said.
Possibilities include using the crushed glass in road fill or concrete, but the real goal is to find a way to extract the hazardous lead from the cullet.
If that can be done, the glass could be used for anything from windows to food containers. (ANI)
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