Anirudh Sharma: Ink made of air pollution
Inventor Anirudh Sharma is the founder of Graviky Labs, an MIT Media Labs spinoff. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
to five million people die
20 minutes' worth of pollution
you can see it right now,
in the air, you won't see them.
and they end up in our bodies --
if not treated in the right time.
when I was a student in 2012,
of a diesel generator,
which is a sign of human progress,
as a society in the last 100 years,
triangular, black-colored swatch,
residual particulate waste
both pollution and inks,
that black-colored mark.
ink that we use conventionally
fossil fuels in factories.
that are burning fossil fuels
on an everyday basis.
of liters of fossil fuels
and our exhaust out there,
and conducted a small experiment.
much pollution to play with,
that would suck in that candle soot,
vegetable oil and vodka,
these were really easily available.
a very rudimentary form of ink
of experimenting
that I showed you in the petri dish,
that is being burned out there.
this experimentation forward
of air pollution.
used to look something like this.
were not always controlled,
looking something like this.
how exactly to reach there.
by that lab through that building
"These guys are making bombs in there,"
wires and smoke in the same vicinity.
and take experiments forward.
and during the early stages,
with contraptions like these.
driving around doing?"
of our system that would capture pollution
a conventional diesel-based car.
and created this into this version
from static sources of pollution,
as soon as you turn this machine on.
the performance of the engine,
95 percent worth of pollution
that we are talking about that we capture,
of operation of a generator.
and our research was advancing,
approached us and said,
further with you guys,
in a very big celebrated form."
off this pollution."
40 to 50 minutes of that car pollution
that is in the petri dish.
that you can write with.
that is generated by the same pollution.
to do a very big trial of this idea.
and we didn't think twice.
in the real world is completely another.
our own houses and own kitchens
for making these inks.
to artists all around the world,
AIR-INKs to the ports
around the world can use it.
started using AIR-INK,
pollution-made artworks
of scientists and engineers and inventors,
than that the product of their work
of the finest artists around the world.
magazine last year,
that we made back in our labs.
by the British artist, Christian Furr,
"Paint It Black" by The Rolling Stones.
and pop-culture artworks.
I mean, just money --
processes and inks
the conventional black inks
thousands of years around the world.
and artworks around the world,
kind of a problem.
to our office address,
with this pollution?"
has pollution samples
from India, from China, you name it.
this specific image, asking us
filled with PM 2.5,
if we paid him some money.
if we did not take that pollution?
or a landfill and dump it over there.
of AIR-INK figured out on the other side,
this pollution and make inks from it,
more valuable products.
is a global killer.
will solve the world's pollution problem.
slightly differently.
I'm holding right now.
AIR-INK I'm talking about.
that is inside this petri dish.
breathing in when we are walking outdoors.
to do better than this.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Anirudh Sharma - Engineer, inventorInventor Anirudh Sharma is the founder of Graviky Labs, an MIT Media Labs spinoff.
Why you should listen
Anirudh Sharma's interest lies in deep-tech, science-based social entrepreneurship. He fuses cutting-edge sensor, wearable and man-machine interface technology. In 2010, Sharma invented a haptic shoe called "Lechal" to guide the blind. Lechal was the earliest wearable innovation designed for the visually challenged. During his tenure at Fluid Interfaces Group at the MIT Media Lab, Sharma worked on future fabrication and augmented reality with futuristic displays. After returning from MIT, he co-led the nonprofit consortium MIT Media Lab India Initiative with the goal of remodeling and perpetuating self-organized, design-led innovation into the grassroots in India.
Sharma also cofounded Graviky Labs to evolve his side project KAALINK, a retrofit technology which captures particulate carbon emissions from chimneys or diesel engines (without affecting the performance of the engine) before they enter the atmosphere. The captured pollutants are then recycled into inks, called AIR-INK. Forty-five minutes of automotive emissions is equivalent to produce 30 milliliters of black AIR-INK. The company has found its niche globally, replacing conventional black inks applied to arts, printing and fashion industry as a means to offset carbon. To date, Graviky has recycled roughly 250 kilograms of PM2.5 air pollution waste, which has produced 1,200 liters of AIR-INK. Sharma also loves folk, magic and indie artforms.
Anirudh Sharma | Speaker | TED.com