Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-Origin South African Teen Wins USD 50,000 Scholarship At Google Science Fair

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Oct, 2016 12:08 PM
    A 16-year-old Indian-origin South African teen has won a USD 50,000 scholarship at the annual Google Science Fair in the US for using orange peel to develop a cheaper "super-absorbent material" that helps soil retain water.
     
    Kiara Nirghin, a Grade 11 student at private school St Martin's, submitted her project titled 'No More Thirsty Crops' which was aimed at alleviating the severe drought plaguing South Africa.
     
    Her solution to the problem of drought uses the peels from orange and avocado fruits, which were normally discarded. The Google Science Fair is a programme for any budding scientists between the ages of 13 to 18, who are invited to solve world's biggest challenges using science and technology.
     
    "I have always had a great love for chemistry since I was young. I vividly remember at the age of seven experimenting with vinegar and baking soda solutions in plastic cups," Nirghin said in her submission, in which she cited a renowned Indian scientist as her greatest inspiration.
     
    "M S Swaminathan, has always been an inspiration of mine as he truly believed in the necessary movement of not only India but the whole world towards sustainable agricultural development," she said.
     
    "I hope to one day become a scientist specialising in agricultural science and also become a molecular gastronomist," she added.
     
    Nirghin explained how she had found an alternative in the fruit peels to super-absorbent polymers (SAPs), which absorb and carry about 300 times its weight in liquid relative to their own mass.
     
    "These SAPs are not biodegradable, costly and full of acrylic acid, sodium hydroxide and other chemicals. During more research in the topic, I found that natural occurring polymers exist in most citrus fruits," Nirghin said.
     
     
    After 45 days of experimentation, Nirghin was successful in creating a low-cost super-absorbent polymer, made out of waste products found in the juice manufacturing industry, that is biodegradable, can retain large amounts of water, keep soil moist and improve crop growth without regular water supplements.
     
    "The only resources involved in the creation of the 'orange peel mixture' were electricity and time, with no special equipment or materials required," she said.
     
    Nirghin's discovery has huge financial implications for agriculture, as her creation could retail at USD 30 to USD 60 per metric tonne, as compared to the USD 2,000 plus costs of SAPs.
     
    The young scientist is convinced that her mixture will help assist farmers in agricultural drought disaster areas, where food security could increase by 73 per cent.
     
    Now Nirghin has set her sights on using orange peel SAP in experiments testing water filtration and oil removal from water.
     
    "I would also like to make large amounts of orange peel SAP and apply it to crops such as maize and wheat in poorer communities in South Africa," she added. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    100 American Congressmen To Visit India In Next Two Years: Policy Group

    100 American Congressmen To Visit India In Next Two Years: Policy Group
    About 100 American Congressmen and Senators will visit India over the next two years to boost India-US ties according to a top advocacy group.

    100 American Congressmen To Visit India In Next Two Years: Policy Group

    Pak Was Almost Placed On Formal List Of State Sponsored Terror: Ex-CIA Official

    A former CIA official has said that Pakistan was "nearly placed" on the list of state sponsored terrorism during 1993 to 1994.

    Pak Was Almost Placed On Formal List Of State Sponsored Terror: Ex-CIA Official

    As Hajj Nears, Questions About Deadly 2015 Stampede Remain

    As Hajj Nears, Questions About Deadly 2015 Stampede Remain
    Marching with thousands of other pilgrims at last year's hajj in Saudi Arabia, 23-year-old Sobia Noor of Pakistan felt the crowd get tighter and the air grow thicker in the scorching heat. 

    As Hajj Nears, Questions About Deadly 2015 Stampede Remain

    Pakistan PM to raise Kashmir issue at UNGA

    Pakistan PM to raise Kashmir issue at UNGA
    Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif will raise the issue of Indias "excessive use of force" against civilians in Jammu and Kashmir during the upcoming United Nations General Assembly session, a statement from the PM House said on Friday.

    Pakistan PM to raise Kashmir issue at UNGA

    UK Education Reforms Spark Debate On Class And The Classroom

    UK Education Reforms Spark Debate On Class And The Classroom
    LONDON — In Britain, the class system and the classroom are intertwined, and education reforms inevitably cause political controversy.

    UK Education Reforms Spark Debate On Class And The Classroom

    UK Sikh Harnaam Kaur Enters Guinness Records As Youngest Female With Beard

    UK Sikh Harnaam Kaur Enters Guinness Records As Youngest Female With Beard
    Harnaam Kaur from Slough in Berkshire in south-east England, described her entry as "absolutely humbling"

    UK Sikh Harnaam Kaur Enters Guinness Records As Youngest Female With Beard