Max Pennington

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Max Pennington

Max Pennington

@maxpennington44

Catching Microplastics at the #1 Source - Washing Machines, Co-Founder & CEO | CLEANR, CWRU | Class of 2022, Madeira HS | Class of 2018

Cleveland, OH Katılım Nisan 2016
150 Takip Edilen130 Takipçiler
Impakt CEO (Winston) - Get paid while getting fit.
We've all heard about microplastics. But few know about its more toxic derivative: Nanoplastics. Scientists say they can reach human blood, cells, and even unborn babies. Here are 7 ways to protect yourself (bookmark this): 🧵
Impakt CEO (Winston) - Get paid while getting fit. tweet mediaImpakt CEO (Winston) - Get paid while getting fit. tweet media
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Max Pennington
Max Pennington@maxpennington44·
@winston_zin Check out CLEANR for Washing Machines. Available for pre-order now. Effective and user friendly. Capturing 90%+ of microplastics with less than 30 seconds of maintenance per week
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Impakt CEO (Winston) - Get paid while getting fit.
4. Wash synthetic clothes properly Clothes made from synthetic fabric shed hundreds of thousands of plastic fibers with each wash. Use a microfiber-catching laundry bag or install a washing machine filter. This keeps these fibers from getting into water and the air you breathe.
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Max Pennington
Max Pennington@maxpennington44·
@DusanMateric Any correlation investigated based on what they recently ate or drank?
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Max Pennington
Max Pennington@maxpennington44·
@hubermanlab @rorrawater Pretty cool. Do you know what their nanofiber cartridge is made from? Surprised it doesn’t need to pump thru like RO filters
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Andrew D. Huberman, Ph.D.
Andrew D. Huberman, Ph.D.@hubermanlab·
I find it weird that most all of the counter top reverse osmosis water filters are made of plastic. The same industry that is built on “keep contaminants out of what you ingest” ethos puts clean/ed water into plastic. Glaring contradiction. I’m excited that @rorrawater is metal.
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Max Pennington
Max Pennington@maxpennington44·
@natfriedman @bobaguys Great to see the continued progress! Love this work. Think you’d be shocked as well to see how much plastic is coming out of your washing machine
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Nat Friedman
Nat Friedman@natfriedman·
Exciting PlasticList update: We were honored to work with @bobaguys to identify and eliminate the sources of BPA contamination, and their teas are now BPA-free! They have fully transitioned to BPA-free receipt paper, which PlasticList confirmed to be BPA-free through independent lab testing. They have also switched to brown sugar in BPA-free packaging. We have been impressed with their commitment to get to the bottom of the issue and move fast to remove BPA from their supply chain. If you want healthy and delicious tea, I highly recommend Boba Guys!
Nat Friedman@natfriedman

Advice for Food Companies Since we launched PlasticList, we’ve been heartened to have quite a few food companies reach out and ask for help interpreting their results and tracking down and eliminating their contamination. I’ve had calls with a bunch of these. I am happy to report that no food company wants this stuff in their food and they are all eager to figure out what’s going on and how to remove it. After a while I noticed the advice we were giving was pretty similar for every company, so I thought it would be useful to write it down and share publicly. So, here are some notes: 1. To track down the source of your contamination, don’t just test a few samples of your product with varied production processes. Instead, test every single one of your inputs: every ingredient and input in the form you receive it before any processing steps, including water and any other consumables. 2. Then, test the food before and after every step in your production process. If you boil something in tap water, test before and after boiling. If you chop something on a plastic cutting board (because wood cutting boards are outlawed in commercial kitchens, apparently), test before and after chopping. 3. You may have to go deep into your supply chain to figure out the source of your contamination. One food company founder we spoke to said that some of the fruit they include in their product is picked, put into plastic bags, and then steamed in the bags before the bags are cut open and the fruit is transferred into another plastic bag, while still warm, for shipping. Whoops. 4. Run at least three samples of every test due to sample-to-sample variation. You can see in our report and in our data that sample-to-sample and lot-to-lot variation should be expected: plasticlist.org/report 5. You should also test any intermediate or final packaging that your product ships in, as leaching can also occur post-production. 6. There are a lot of steps that you need to carefully follow to prevent contaminating your samples during collection and transportation. It’s really easy to miss one of these and mess up your data. We describe many of these on our methodology page: plasticlist.org/methodology 7. You should consider running longitudinal tests, maybe quarterly, as we have heard that there can be seasonal variation in contamination from suppliers, due to things like summer heat, suppliers switching their processes, and suppliers switching their own backend suppliers for their inputs. 8. And most importantly: PICK A GOOD LAB. Unfortunately not all labs are good, and we think many ISO-certified commercial labs will not give reliable results. We rejected many certified labs because we weren’t confident in their work; all-in-all, we spent about 10 weeks finding a lab that we trust for our tests. You can see our lab’s internal methodology here: docs.google.com/document/d/1pc… Our lab has recently permitted us to identify them publicly, and they are IEH: iehinc.com We also worked with Light Labs to produce this study and they can be a big help: lightlabs.com And Million Marker is able to work with food companies to debug their supply chains as well: millionmarker.com 9. You should consider hiring an analytical chemist as a consultant to validate that the testing methodology is accurate and to double-check the lab’s results. We hired John Brock to do this and it was well worth it; we would not have been confident in our choice of lab or our results without John. 10. We couldn’t find a lot of evidence that the phthalate substitutes are bad; if you have high-percentile detections in phthalates or bisphenols, though, it’s probably worth figuring out how those chemicals are getting into your products.

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Max Pennington
Max Pennington@maxpennington44·
@craigbrockie Would love to send you a CLEANR! Hitting the market later this year - we should connect
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🧬Craig Brockie
🧬Craig Brockie@CraigBrockie·
@maxpennington44 Totally agree! Let's tackle the issue at the source. Microplastic filters in washers can make a big difference. 💯
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🧬Craig Brockie
🧬Craig Brockie@CraigBrockie·
Microplastics are POISONING us—slowly, silently, and PERMANENTLY. There are TRILLIONS of microplastics everywhere and they’re the highest they’ve ever been in our bodies—brain, liver, lungs, everywhere. But don't panic—there are solutions: 🧵
🧬Craig Brockie tweet media🧬Craig Brockie tweet media
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Max Pennington
Max Pennington@maxpennington44·
@craigbrockie We need to catch the primary microplastics at the source. Would love to see microplastic filters for washing machines added to your solution list
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🧬Craig Brockie
🧬Craig Brockie@CraigBrockie·
Microplastics range in size from microscope nanoparticles to a few millmeters. There are 2 types: Primary: Manufactured particles used in cosmetics, clothing, etc. Secondary: Particles broken down from larger plastics. They penetrate us through food, air, water.
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belle
belle@therawhuni·
cotton jeans, cotton tee, cotton cardigan and a faux leather jacket. we almost made it
belle tweet media
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Justin Mares
Justin Mares@jwmares·
At Kettle and Fire, we tested our product for microplastics, BPA, and phthalates. When we found slightly higher microplastic levels than desired, we traced it to rubber gloves in our supply chain that were shedding particles. It's incredible how much detail you need to investigate to ensure your products remain free from contamination…
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Dr Richard Kirby
Dr Richard Kirby@PlanktonPundit·
Awful sight of plastic microfibers in my plankton sample today. Just 2mm long, they form a deadly, zooplankton trapping, drift net that is likely to be eaten by fish to enter the food chain. The scale of this problem cannot be underestimated. @zeiss_micro
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Max Pennington
Max Pennington@maxpennington44·
@thekatfu The fibers are pervasive. I bet a lot of them coming right from our clothing into the air and right from our washing machines into the water
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Kat Fu, M.S., M.S.
Kat Fu, M.S., M.S.@thekatfu·
Plastics in water (a) pellets, (b) fibers, (c) fragments, (d) films 📕Gambino I, et al. Occurrence of Microplastics in Tap and Bottled Water: Current Knowledge. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Apr 26;19(9):5283.
Kat Fu, M.S., M.S. tweet media
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