ART Insignia
art INSIGNIA defines the art & design aesthetics with the profound introspection of the inner self. It symbolises the perfection and creativity in its true representation.
19/10/2017
HAPPY DIWALI !
Ladies & Gentlemen !
Wish you the prosperity & love !
15/06/2017
We always try to keep itself updated with the technologies and the breakthrough in the field of science of polymer. We've find the ways to produce plastics from the sugar and carbon dioxide.
Researchers from the Centre for Sustainable Chemical Technologies (CSCT) at the University of Bath have made it possible for some biodegradable plastics to be made using sugar and carbon dioxide in the future, replacing unsustainable plastics, which are made from crude oil.
19/05/2017
What then is the advantage of polymer notes over paper ones? DPL wants you to take a look at the chemistry and the benefits of the polymer currency.
India is also keen in introducing the polymer currency very soon.
Paper banknotes aren’t made of paper in the usual sense – wood pulp paper wouldn’t be durable enough, and would absorb water too easily. Instead cotton paper is used, sometimes mixed with other textiles in small amounts. In a way, paper banknotes could be considered to be polymer banknotes too; cotton consists of around 90% cellulose, a natural polymer formed from a large number of glucose units, and commonly found in the cell walls of plants.
Actual polymer bank notes are usually made from biaxially oriented polypropylene. ‘Biaxally oriented’ doesn’t, as you might expect, refer to the structure of the polymer, but due to the process it undergoes during its manufacture – particularly the manner in which it is stretched in two different directions during manufacture. This stretching enhances the strength and transparency of the film produced. The film’s transparency is often preserved in a window on the note, but the majority is coated in a white pigment to make it opaque before printing on the notes.
So why are countries looking into replacing paper banknotes with polymer notes? Part of the reason is cost. Polymer notes remain usable on average 2.5 times longer than paper ones, due to their higher durability. They’re more difficult to tear, waterproof, and do not absorb dirt or other substances. Their longer life offsets the fact that they are slightly more expensive to produce. They also have the advantage that when they reach the end of their usable life, being plastic they can be recycled – unlike paper notes, which must be shredded or burned.
Another benefit of polymer notes is the fact they they are more difficult to counterfeit than paper notes. Many of the security features they use are similar to those used on paper notes, but the increased difficulty of producing some of these on plastic notes makes them harder to replicate. But what are these security features?
It’s a little hard to go into specific detail, due to the fact that specific compounds or compositions used are understandably kept a close secret. However, we can look in general terms at some of the security features. A group of features are dubbed ‘Optically Variable Devices’ (OVDs), and all work on the principle that their appearance changes when something external to the note changes (usually light or viewing angle). Very thing gold foil is a simple example of this – in reflected light the foil appears gold, whereas in transmitted light it appears green. Diffraction gratings are also OVDs, and involve thin patterned lines (as many as 12,000 per centimetre) coated with a reflective metal such as aluminium, which gives a variety of colours depending on the angle from which the note is viewed.
Another commonly used security feature is impregnating portions of the note with compounds that appear a different colour under ultraviolet light. Probably the most well-known example of this is the use of Europium complexes in Euro notes. Europium is a member of the lanthanide group in the periodic table, and many lanthanide compounds fluoresce under UV light. The UV light excites electrons in the compounds to higher energy levels (known as an excited state) before they lose this excess energy and fall back to their original position. The excess energy is lost as visible light, giving the appearance of fluorescence.
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