
National Highways
National Highways
41 Projects, page 1 of 9
assignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2026Partners:Mott Macdonald UK Ltd, CIRIA, National Highways, AECOM, Stantec UK Ltd +5 partnersMott Macdonald UK Ltd,CIRIA,National Highways,AECOM,Stantec UK Ltd,Inverness Airport,Imperial College London,City of London Corporation,AECOM Limited (UK),CEMEX Global HQFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: MR/W013169/1Funder Contribution: 1,529,410 GBPPermeable (fast draining) infrastructure will reduce the impact from climate change and urbanisation related flooding, which has a projected annual global cost of £500bn by 2030. Flooding is expected to cost the UK economy £27bn annually by 2080, without investment in flood resilient infrastructure. Along with the 2020 government plan for green infrastructure development, it is timely to invest in flood resilient permeable infrastructure. An extreme example of flood-affected infrastructure are airport pavements, impacted by stormwater and ice/snow build-up causing aircraft skidding. Skidding accounts for nearly half of all post 1990 major global commercial air crashes. In 2017 a Heathrow snow event grounded over 50,000 passengers and required a hurried £10m purchase of de-icing equipment. The current methods for preventing ice/snow build-up damage the environment, aircraft components and runway surfaces, increasing infrastructure maintenance costs. Airport operators, seeking to address these concerns, have expressed a strong desire to use permeable concrete technology to keep infrastructure clear. Permeable concrete pavements are one of the most promising mitigation strategies to prevent surface flooding, they rapidly drain stormwater through otherwise impermeable infrastructure. Conventional permeable pavements are, however, prone to clogging, due to debris trapped within the pore network, blocking the pavement and reducing its drainage capacity. The frequent required maintenance degrades performance and service life and is difficult to perform in an active airport. Most importantly, conventional permeable pavements have insufficient strength, making them unsuited for airports. There is an urgent need for a new system that can reliably keep airports clear of standing water and ice/snow. I recently developed next generation clogging resistant permeable pavement (CRP) of uniform pore structure to address infrastructure flooding. It has improved strength (twice as strong >50 MPa) and higher permeability (ten times more) than conventional systems of equal porosity, yet does not clog despite exposure to stormwater sediments. This Fellowship will significantly reengineer my novel pavement to develop the first permeable pavement, with sufficient strength and resilience, for the extreme airport case, while also applicable to less extreme highway, railway and novel green wall scenarios. These step-change advancements will be achieved by steel reinforcement, used in permeable pavements for the first time. The structural performance, material integrity, skid resistance, long-term durability and hydrological (drainage) properties will be assessed for airport suitability and improved if required. This project will be the first to investigate conductive (direct contact) and convective (transmission through air) heat transfer through permeable pavements used in high-value heavy load-bearing infrastructure. I will use heat extracted from the ground (ground source energy system, GSES) in these new pavements to melt the deposited ice/snow and drain away the excess water. Conventional pavements can be heated by conduction only, whereas CRP can be heated through both conduction and convection (via the pores) as the novel pore structure also allows for natural convection. This Fellowship will, through extensive laboratory experimentation, computer modelling and the permanent large-scale deployment at Inverness Airport (spanning across multiple technology readiness levels (1-7), a measure of technology maturity), develop climate change resilient infrastructure materials that can be used to deliver a sustainable built environment resistant to flooding, ice/snow build-up and the harmful heat island effect. To achieve this ambitious goal, I will address significant structural, material, thermal and hydrological challenges with wide reaching economic, environmental and societal benefits to the construction and transportation sector.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2017 - 2022Partners:CEMEX UK Operations Ltd, Micropore Technologies, Cardiff University, Department for Transport, Atkins (United Kingdom) +48 partnersCEMEX UK Operations Ltd,Micropore Technologies,Cardiff University,Department for Transport,Atkins (United Kingdom),Welsh Government,Cardiff University,LUSAS (United Kingdom),Arup Group,Jacobs UK Limited,Atkins Global,Lambson Fine Chemicals Ltd,CEMEX,COSTAIN LTD,Mott Macdonald UK Ltd,Alun Griffiths (Contractors) Limited,Foseco International Ltd,Arup Group Ltd,Ove Arup & Partners Ltd,SABIC (Saudi Basic Industries Corp),Fosroc International Ltd (UK),Isle Utilities,Graphitene Ltd,Lambson Ltd,Graphitene Ltd,Building Research Establishment,Isle Utilities,Costain Ltd,Welsh Government,Travis Perkins,Micropore Technologies,Tarmac,Jacobs Engineering UK Ltd.,Alun Griffiths (Contractors) Limited,BRE Trust,Highways Agency,High Speed Two HS2 Ltd,High Speed Two HS2 Limited,Atkins Global (UK),CEMEX UK Operations Ltd,Travis Perkins,WELSH GOVERNMENT,SWECO UK,CH2M,National Highways,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),Tarmac,SWECO UK,BRE Trust (Building Res Excellence),Lusas,CARDIFF UNIVERSITY,Lusas,ch2mFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/P02081X/1Funder Contribution: 4,851,940 GBPThe vision of RM4L is that, by 2022 we will have achieved a transformation in construction materials, using the biomimetic approach first adopted in M4L, to create materials that will adapt to their environment, develop immunity to harmful actions, self-diagnose the on-set of deterioration and self-heal when damaged. This innovative research into smart materials will engender a step-change in the value placed on infrastructure materials and provide a much higher level of confidence and reliability in the performance of our infrastructure systems. The ambitious programme of inter-related work is divided into four Research Themes (RTs); RT1: Self-healing of cracks at multiple scales, RT2: Self-healing of time-dependent and cyclic loading damage, RT3: Self-diagnosis and immunisation against physical damage, and RT4: Self-diagnosis and healing of chemical damage. These bring together the four complementary technology areas of self-diagnosis (SD); self-immunisation and self-healing (SH); modelling and tailoring; and scaling up to address a diverse range of applications such as cast in-situ, precast, repair systems, overlays and geotechnical systems. Each application will have a nominated 'champion' to ensure viable solutions are developed. There are multiple inter-relationships between the Themes. The nature of the proposed research will be highly varied and encompass, amongst other things, fundamental physico-chemical actions of healing systems, flaws in potentially viable SH systems; embryonic and high-risk ideas for SH and SD; and underpinning mathematical models and optimisation studies for combined self-diagnosing/self-healing/self-immunisation systems. Industry, including our industrial partners throughout the construction supply chain and those responsible for the provision, management and maintenance of the world's built environment infrastructure will be the main beneficiaries of this project. We will realise our vision by addressing applications that are directly informed by these industrial partners. By working with them across the supply chain and engaging with complementary initiatives such as UKCRIC, we will develop a suite of real life demonstration projects. We will create a network for Early Career Researchers (ECRs) in this field which will further enhance the diversity and reach of our existing UK Virtual Centre of Excellence for intelligent, self-healing construction materials. We will further exploit established relationships with the international community to maximise impact and thereby generate new initiatives in a wide range of related research areas, e.g. bioscience (bacteria); chemistry (SH agents); electrochemical science (prophylactics); computational mechanics (tailoring and modelling); material science and engineering (nano-structures, polymer composites); sensors and instrumentation and advanced manufacturing. Our intention is to exploit the momentum in outreach achieved during the M4L project and advocate our work and the wider benefits of EPRSC-funded research through events targeted at the general public and private industry. The academic impact of this research will be facilitated through open-access publications in high-impact journals and by engagement with the wider research community through interdisciplinary networks, conferences, seminars and workshops.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2016 - 2024Partners:WSP UK LIMITED, Mott Macdonald, CIRIA, EDF Energy (United Kingdom), Halcrow Group Ltd +86 partnersWSP UK LIMITED,Mott Macdonald,CIRIA,EDF Energy (United Kingdom),Halcrow Group Ltd,LONDON UNDERGROUND LIMITED,Thales Aerospace,WSP UK LIMITED,COSTAIN LTD,TREL,NPL,WSP Civils,Telespazio Vega,Redbite Solutions,Telespazio Vega,Rolatube Technology Ltd,Heriot-Watt University,Buro Happold Limited,Arup Group Ltd,Buro Happold,BURO HAPPOLD LIMITED,Geothermal International Ltd,AIG Science,CH2M HILL UNITED KINGDOM,Tongji University,Centro Public Transport,Carillion Plc,Cambridgeshire County Council,UCL,National Physical Laboratory NPL,Transport Systems Catapult,Environmental Scientifics Group,UT,Environmental Scientifics Group,CIRIA,National Highways,Future Cities Catapult,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),RU,Costain Ltd,ITM,Cambridge Integrated Knowledge Centre,Department for Transport,High Speed Two HS2 Limited,Ove Arup & Partners Ltd,GE Aviation,INF,Rolatube Technology Ltd,Cementation Skanska,Tongji University,University of Cambridge,University of Oxford,Sengenia Ltd,Crossrail Limited,Arup Group,AIG Science,High Speed Two HS2 Ltd,Crossrail Limited,Geothermal International Ltd,Transport Systems Catapult,Mabey Holdings Limited,Future Cities Catapult,Centro Public Transport,Thales UK Limited,AgustaWestland,Heriot-Watt University,Sengenia Ltd,Omnisense Limited,Redbite Solutions,Cambridgeshire County Council,UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE,ITM Monitoring,EDF Energy Plc (UK),Topcon Great Britain Ltd,McLaren Automotive Ltd,Cementation Skanska Limited,Topcon,Laing O'Rourke,British Energy Generation Ltd,Laing O'Rourke plc,Mabey Holdings Limited,CH2M Hill (United Kingdom),Rutgers State University of New Jersey,TfL,Toshiba Research Europe Ltd,THALES UK LIMITED,McLaren Automotive Ltd,Highways Agency,GE Aviation,Rutgers University,Cargill PlcFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/N021614/1Funder Contribution: 3,163,720 GBPGlobally, national infrastructure is facing significant challenges: - Ageing assets: Much of the UK's existing infrastructure is old and no longer fit for purpose. In its State of the Nation Infrastructure 2014 report the Institution of Civil Engineers stated that none of the sectors analysed were "fit for the future" and only one sector was "adequate for now". The need to future-proof existing and new infrastructure is of paramount importance and has become a constant theme in industry documents, seminars, workshops and discussions. - Increased loading: Existing infrastructure is challenged by the need to increase load and usage - be that number of passengers carried, numbers of vehicles or volume of water used - and the requirement to maintain the existing infrastructure while operating at current capacity. - Changing climate: projections for increasing numbers and severity of extreme weather events mean that our infrastructure will need to be more resilient in the future. These challenges require innovation to address them. However, in the infrastructure and construction industries tight operating margins, industry segmentation and strong emphasis on safety and reliability create barriers to introducing innovation into industry practice. CSIC is an Innovation and Knowledge Centre funded by EPSRC and Innovate UK to help address this market failure, by translating world leading research into industry implementation, working with more than 40 industry partners to develop, trial, provide and deliver high-quality, low cost, accurate sensor technologies and predictive tools which enable new ways of monitoring how infrastructure behaves during construction and asset operation, providing a whole-life approach to achieving sustainability in an integrated way. It provides training and access for industry to source, develop and deliver these new approaches to stimulate business and encourage economic growth, improving the management of the nation's infrastructure and construction industry. Our collaborative approach, bringing together leaders from industry and academia, accelerates the commercial development of emerging technologies, and promotes knowledge transfer and industry implementation to shape the future of infrastructure. Phase 2 funding will enable CSIC to address specific challenges remaining to implementation of smart infrastructure solutions. Over the next five years, to overcome these barriers and create a self-sustaining market in smart infrastructure, CSIC along with an expanded group of industry and academic partners will: - Create the complete, innovative solutions that the sector needs by integrating the components of smart infrastructure into systems approaches, bringing together sensor data and asset management decisions to improve whole life management of assets and city scale infrastructure planning; spin-in technology where necessary, to allow demonstration of smart technology in an integrated manner. - Continue to build industry confidence by working closely with partners to demonstrate and deploy new smart infrastructure solutions on live infrastructure projects. Develop projects on behalf of industry using seed-funds to fund hardware and consumables, and demonstrate capability. - Generate a compelling business case for smart infrastructure solutions together with asset owners and government organisations based on combining smarter information with whole life value models for infrastructure assets. Focus on value-driven messaging around the whole system business case for why smart infrastructure is the future, and will strive to turn today's intangibles into business drivers for the future. - Facilitate the development and expansion of the supply chain through extending our network of partners in new areas, knowledge transfer, smart infrastructure standards and influencing policy.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2033Partners:Atkins Global (UK), Whitby Wood Limited, UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE, Hypertunnel, University of California Berkeley +32 partnersAtkins Global (UK),Whitby Wood Limited,UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE,Hypertunnel,University of California Berkeley,Bouygues UK,Ward and Burke Construction Ltd (Global),Milestones Infrastructure,NSG Group (UK),Versarien plc,ENECHANGE Innovation,CAM DRAGON,Biozeroc,Nanyang Technological University,Network Rail,NUS,Laing O'Rourke plc,BW Industries,Henry Royce Institute,WSP Group (Global),Geowynd,Ordnance Survey,QinetiQ,Vinci Construction,OMS Ltd,JS2 Innovation,Tracey Concrete Ltd,Seequent,Metsec PIC,Keltbray Ltd,MODAGROUP,nPlan,Aviva Plc,National Highways,Ramboll UK,Massachusetts Institute of Technology,TU DelftFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Y034643/1Funder Contribution: 8,545,520 GBPCivil infrastructure is the key to unlocking net zero. To achieve the ambitious UK targets of net zero by 2050, we require innovative approaches to design, construction, and operation that prioritise energy efficiency, renewable resources, and low-carbon materials. Meeting net zero carbon emissions will require not only significant investment and planning, but also a radical shift in how we approach the design and management of our civil infrastructure. Reliable low carbon infrastructure sector solutions that meet real user needs are essential to ensure a smooth and safe transition to a net zero future. To address these challenges, the UK must develop highly skilled infrastructure professionals who can champion this urgent, complex, interconnected and cross-disciplinary transition to net zero infrastructure. This EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Future Infrastructure and Built Environment: Unlocking Net Zero (FIBE3 CDT) aims to lead this transformation by co-developing and co-delivering an inspirational doctoral training programme with industry partners. FIBE3 will focus on meeting the user needs of the construction and infrastructure sector in its pursuit of net zero. Our goal is to equip emerging talents from diverse academic and social backgrounds with the skills, knowledge and qualities to engineer the infrastructure needed to unlock net zero, including technological, environmental, economic, social and demographic challenges. Achievable outcomes will include a dynamic roadmap for the infrastructure that unlocks net zero, cohort-based doctoral student training with immersive industry experience, a CDT which is firmly embedded within existing net zero research initiatives, and expanded networks and outward-facing education. These outcomes will be centred around four thematic enablers: (1) existing and disruptive/new technologies, (2) radical circularity and whole life approach, (3) AI-driven digitalisation and data, and (4) risk-based systems thinking and connectivity. FIBE3 doctoral students will be trained to unlock net zero by evolving the MRes year to include intimate industry engagement through the novel introduction of a fourth dimension to our successful 'T-shaped' training model and designing the PhD with regular outward-facing deliverables. We have leveraged industry-borne ideas to align theory and practice, streamline business and research needs, and provide both academic-led and industry-led training activities. Cohort-based training in technical, commercial, transferable and personal skills will be provided for our graduates to become skilled professionals and leaders in delivering net zero infrastructure. FIBE3's alignment with real industry needs is backed by a 31 strong consortium, including owners, consultants, contractors, technology providers and knowledge transfer partners, who actively seek engagement for solutions and will support the CDT with substantial cash (£2.56M) and in-kind (£8.88M) contributions. At Cambridge, the FIBE3 CDT will be embedded within an inspirational research and training environment, a culture of academic excellence and within a department with strategic cross-cutting research themes that have net zero ambitions at their core. This is exemplified by Cambridge's portfolio of over £60M current aligned research grant funding and our internationally renowned centres and initiatives including the Digital Roads of the Future Initiative, the Centre for Smart Infrastructure and Construction, Cambridge Zero and Cambridge Centres for Climate Repair and Carbon Credits, as well as our strong partnerships with UK universities and leading academic centres across the globe. Our proposed vision, training structure and deliverables are exciting and challenging; we are confident that we have the right team to deliver a highly successful FIBE3 CDT and to continue to develop outstanding PhD graduates who will be net zero infrastructure champions of the future.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2027Partners:Branscan Ltd, Aston University, Highways Agency, BAE systems Inc (Global), University of Lille 1 Science (replace) +21 partnersBranscan Ltd,Aston University,Highways Agency,BAE systems Inc (Global),University of Lille 1 Science (replace),ARDEN,Aston University,Eblana Photonics (Ireland),Sofia University,Branscan Ltd,Xtera Communications Limited,USTL,NKT Photonics A/S,Thales (France),Pilot Photonics (Ireland),University of Lille 1,Arden Photonics,PILOT,OFS Fitel LLC,Xtera Communications Limited,BAE systems Inc (Global),Thales (International),National Highways,Nice Sophia Antipolis University,OFS Fitel, LLC. (International),ThalesFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/W002868/1Funder Contribution: 1,722,850 GBPTechnologies underpin economic and industrial advances and improvements in healthcare, education and societal and public infrastructure. Technologies of the future depend on scientific breakthroughs of the past and present, including new knowledge bases, ideas, and concepts. The proposed international network of interdisciplinary centre-to-centre collaborations aims to drive scientific and technological progress by advancing and developing a new science platform for emerging technology - the optical frequency comb (OFC) with a range of practical applications of high industrial and societal importance in telecommunications, metrology, healthcare, environmental applications, bio-medicine, food industry and agri-tech and many other applications. The optical frequency comb is a breakthrough photonic technology that has already revolutionised a range of scientific and industrial fields. In the family of OFC technologies, dual-comb spectroscopy plays a unique role as the most advanced platform combining the strengths of conventional spectroscopy and laser spectroscopy. Measurement techniques relying on multi-comb, mostly dual-comb and very recently tri-combs, offer the promise of exquisite accuracy and speed. The large majority of initial laboratory results originate from cavity-based approaches either using bulky powerful Ti:Sapphire lasers, or ultra-compact micro-resonators. While these technologies have many advantages, they also feature certain drawbacks for some applications. They require complex electronic active stabilisation schemes to phase-lock the different single-combs together, and the characteristics of the multi-comb source are not tuneable since they are severely dictated by the opto-geometrical parameters of the cavity. Thus, their repetition rates cannot be optimised to the decay rates of targeted samples, nor their relative repetition rates to sample the response of the medium. Such lack of versatility leads to speed and resolution limitations. These major constraints impact the development of these promising systems and make difficult their deployment outside the labs. To drive OFC sources, and in particular, multi-comb source towards a tangible science-to-technology breakthrough, the current state of the art shows that a fundamental paradigm shift is required to achieve the needs of robustness, performance and versatility in repetition rates and/or comb optical characteristics as dictated by the diversity of applications. In this project we propose and explore new approaches to create flexible and tunable comb sources, based on original design concepts. The novelty and transformative nature of our programme is in addressing engineering challenges and designs treating nonlinearity as an inherent part of the engineering systems rather than as a foe. Using the unique opportunity provided by the EPSRC international research collaboration programme, this project will bring together a critical mass of academic and industrial partners with complimentary expertise ranging from nonlinear mathematics to industrial engineering to develop new concepts and ideas underpinning emerging and future OFC technologies. The project will enhance UK capabilities in key strategic areas including optical communications, laser technology, metrology, and sensing, including the mid-IR spectral region, highly important for healthcare and environment applications, food, agri-tech and bio-medical applications. Such a wide-ranging and transformative project requires collaborative efforts of academic and industrial groups with complimentary expertise across these fields. There are currently no other UK projects addressing similar research challenges. Therefore, we believe that this project will make an important contribution to UK standing in this field of high scientific and industrial importance.
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