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The Palo Alto Research Center
funded by Xerox is developing a new type of paper that can be reused at least
100 times, as the special chemicals it is coated with make the ink fade away
after 16 to 24 hours.
The paper
has specially-coded molecules that react in contact with ultraviolet light
emitted inside the printer, turning dark. Within 24 hours, the molecules fade
back to their normal state and the paper can be printed again.
If the user
doesn’t want to wait until the paper fades by itself, the paper can be run
through the special printer that was designed for it. The printer will erase
the old image before printing the new one.
Until now,
Xerox has produced the special paper in white and in yellow, with a variety of
ink colors that can be used on it.
It is
estimated that 15 trillion pages of paper are printed everyday and Xerox
predicts that the number will grow with 30 percent in the next ten years.
"I think it is extremely critical to continuously come
up with innovative ideas and work with your partners to turn them into
innovations that the customers of the world can benefit from. If you stand
still, you become obsolete," Sophie Vandebroek, chief technology officer at
Parc, told BBC News.
Parc, which is continually searching for innovative ideas,
has picked several other projects it wants to develop, regarding solar power, environmentally
friendly plastic, spiral cleaning, and a cell detection method that could be a
life-savior, BBC informs on its website.
"Our mission is to deliver innovations that solve the
problems our customers face today while creating visionary technologies for
tomorrow and beyond," Vandebroek said.
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