| ▲ | pseudosaid 7 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
dont be like that. so semantic youre missing the point so you can dote on yourself. I feel like its pretty obvious they mean an adhesive in the sense of an additional substance or agent. Just because they use a laser to modify the paper structure to effectively become sticky, doesnt detract at all from the goal and point of the title. that no additional products/agent/glues were needed. absolutely missing the point of it all just to jerk your ego off. this is so prevalent on HH that it’s normalized and most the cerebral bozos cant read between lines beyond their self righteous vantage. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | DoctorOetker 7 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I think the remark -while rude- brings up an important point: is the in-situ generated adhesive compatible with the paper recycling processes? if so, it seems that simply applying the discovered in-situ chemicals artificially would be faster and not rely on CO2 laser tube set-up (they don't last forever). If it IS compatible with the later recycling steps, then what prevents us from simply applying a similar or simplified mix of chemicals generated by the CO2 laser treatment? Suppose some adhesives already use the same or similar chemicals, the question would arise if you really discovered a compatible glue, or if you just discovered a proper dosage in your application? We can keep coming up with elegant research showing this or that is compatible with a certain recycling step, in the case that some players in industry use inappropriate amounts of glue, the problem would not be a lack of compatible glues but proper dosing, or tracing the manufacturer / end-users of the glue/paper combination that gunked up some recycling process. | |||||||||||||||||
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