Mexican to the war cry
The Mexicans who created bioplastic from potato peel
In Mexico, of the 100 million tons of potato produced annually, only 33 percent is recycled. In addition, according to the National Institute of Recyclers (INARE), in 2012, only 67 million 810 thousand 700 tons of waste were recycled. Therefore, contamination due to disposable products has been ...
The Mexican children who took silver in the International Mathematical Olympiad in the United Kingdom
Mexico won a silver medal, three bronze and two honorable mentions at the 60th International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) held at the University of Bath, United Kingdom. The awards will be held next Sunday, July 21. The team, whose plane tickets were financed by ...
What do we need for a world without styrofoam?
Zapopan, Jalisco. March 4, 2019 (Ciencia MX) .- With the aim of developing new and more ecological materials, the Polybion company seeks to enter into the manufacture of alternatives to Styrofoam packaging, with products made from industrial waste that degrades in Little time. This initiative was raised for two years, ...
UNAM students developed an electric bicycle for public loan
The prototype was created by Julio César Arce, a CIDI student at the Faculty of Architecture • Its dimensions are in accordance with functional and ergonomic aspects of the Mexican population • At the Engineering Institute they already produce 30 units of a first batch. UNAM conceived the ideal transport for ...
Mexican students create bioplastic with banana peels that degrades in 30 days
What began as a school science project to request research grants for future studies, resulted for three high school students from the Popular Autonomous University of the State of Puebla (UPAEP) the opportunity to represent their country in an international contest. Aranza Meza Dorantes, Israel Hernández and Edmundo Balderas Castro created plastic ...
Learn about the method that generates fuels from garbage, developed by Mexican technologists
We read in ID Agency: A couple of graduates from the University of Guadalajara (UdeG) will apply technology developed by themselves in the Democratic Republic of the Congo to generate electricity, methane gas and diesel using garbage. José de Jesús Dueñas García, professional technologist in Industrial Electricity, and Ricardo González Dueñas, graduate in Information Technology, ...