The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Team’s PPE work could help tackle masks issue

- PETER JOHN MEIKLEM

Anti- viral jackets with pockets that protect against coronaviru­s could be made from an experiment­al fabric in developmen­t in Tayside.

Researcher­s from the James Hutton Institute outside Dundee are working with businesses CelluComp in Fife and Halley Stevensons in the city on a new line of personal protective equipment (PPE) that is reusable and recyclable.

The team plans to develop prototypes in nine months that could change the way PPE is used and disposed of.

Research funders Innovate UK have awarded them almost £500,000 to pursue their goal.

Jimmy Campbell, managing director of Halley Stevensons, said: “CelluComp and Hutton

are developing the antiviral part of it.

“We’re looking at how we can apply this to a fabric that is multi-use and can be recycled.

“It could go into jackets and gloves.

“There are lots of potential end uses of it – not just medical.”

He said the company’s waxed cotton product mostly went into jackets, but they had been working

with the NHS on producing scrubs since the start of the pandemic.

“There could be pocket linings where you’ve got your hands, even hoods.

“If you’re in and out of supermarke­ts, with your car keys, does it help that you’ve got an anti- viral finish in your pocket that’s durable to washing. Maybe so.”

Another issue is that Scotland’s beaches are now being polluted with dumped PPE.

Project leader Dr Andrew Love, of James Hutton Institute, said people are throwing away 129 billion disposable masks every month worldwide.

As many as a quarter of all Scottish beaches have PPE dumped on them, he added.

He said discarded PPE will break into fragments over time and can enter the food chain, which can have impact on the environmen­t, wildlife and human health.

“It’s a local and a global problem,” he said.

“Disposable masks don’t actively kill viruses or bacteria, he added.

“While they do offer a degree of protection there is a possibilit­y that viruses can be trapped within these materials and potentiall­y go back in to the environmen­t.”

He said the project aimed to produce a highly absorbent material that does not “wet out” when breathed through.

“Yo u want to have material which can capture the moisture, captures the viruses and eventually kill them,” he added.

Dr Love said the fabric could be used in fight against coronaviru­s and also protect against any future virus outbreak, adding that it would be “a big win for the planet”.

Emma Lee l , litter manager at Zero Waste Scotland, said single-use face coverings polluted streets , coasts , the countrysid­e and waterways.

“We welcome new innovation­s which reduce our reliance on single-use items,” she said.

“Opting for reusable face coverings instead is a big win for the planet.”

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 ??  ?? POLLUTION PROBLEM: Single-use masks dumped around the country during the pandemic have turned up on a quarter of Scotland’s beaches.
POLLUTION PROBLEM: Single-use masks dumped around the country during the pandemic have turned up on a quarter of Scotland’s beaches.
 ??  ?? Jimmy Campbell, left, and Dr Andrew Love.
Jimmy Campbell, left, and Dr Andrew Love.

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