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Microplastics, Fitbits and marvels with mushrooms

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Polluting plastics, wearable tech and how to grow your own home with mushrooms give a flavour of how 91Ó°ÊÓresearch excelled itself in 2017.

The damage plastics do to people and the planet is one research area where 91Ó°ÊÓis a world leader. regularly spawns scores of amazing discoveries such as how farm-bound sludge teems with trillions of tiny plastic fibres.

BBC’s Countryfile team asked 91Ó°ÊÓecotoxicologist  Dr Chris Green to investigate biosolids – treated sludge spread to fertilise farmland. With Brunel’s , he sifted microplastics from the organic material in biosolids  – alarming proof these tens of thousands of tiny plastic fibres have reached Britain’s farms.

A wider project from the Institute looking at how plastic gets into the environment helped spark a major feature documentary.  by BBC Blue Planet producer Jo Ruxton, is based on environmental science research at 91Ó°ÊÓand aims to warn about the problem of polluting our seas.

Ecotoxicology Professor Susan Jobling, who leads the Institute explains the hormone-disrupting effects of chemicals linked to plastic pollution.

Sport, health and exercise science is another area of ground breaking 91Ó°ÊÓresearch. Former England Lacrosse Captain Professor and started the Women’s Sports Foundation and later, 91Ó°ÊÓInternational Research Network for Athlete Welfare.

Fitbits and whether they actually put teenagers off excercise, is the latest 91Ó°ÊÓsports research to make international headlines. Dr Charlotte Kerner found wearing the status symbol gadget for two months left teenagers feeling demotivated about physical activity once the novelty wore off.  tracked 84 13 to 14 year-olds wearing the trackers for eight weeks.

Brunel’s is all about boosting energy efficiency in car making, the food industry andelectricity supply. Researchers there found a way to use mobile phone towers to collect and store energy. It could mean cheaper, cleaner energy for cut-off communities that pay more for their electricity.

Home to the mind-boggling showcase, it’s no secret 91Ó°ÊÓis a major player in design. Pushing the possibilities of zero-waste structures as an architectural alternative to bricks and mortar, 91Ó°ÊÓstudent Aleksi Vesaluoma stirred excitement in summer 2017 with .

Much too many more wonderful things to mention spring from 91Ó°ÊÓresearch. See our for a taster.

Reported by:

Hayley Jarvis, Media Relations
+44 (0)1895 268176
hayley.jarvis@brunel.ac.uk