
Air Liquide (France)
Air Liquide (France)
3 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2007 - 2011Partners:Jaguar Cars, Asylum Research UK Ltd, Edwards, MSU, Unimatic Engineers Ltd +140 partnersJaguar Cars,Asylum Research UK Ltd,Edwards,MSU,Unimatic Engineers Ltd,Cognition Europe,The Technology Partnership Plc (TTP),Comsol Ltd,Ministry of Defence (MOD),BP Exploration Operating Company Ltd,COMSOL Ltd,Thales,Instem Computer Systems,Thales Aerospace,Oxford Instruments Group (UK),Bernard Matthews,LG Mouchel and Partners,Holroyd Machine Tools Gears &,Accuromm UK Ltd,Unilever (United Kingdom),Ministry of Defence,Bombardier Aerospace,LCP CONSULTING LTD,BAE Sytems Electronics Ltd,Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),Thales,Rolls-Royce Plc (UK),AIRBUS UK,Marden Edwards Ltd,Unipath Ltd,Galorath Affiliates Ltd,Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),GE Fanuc Europe SA - UK Branch,East of England Development Agency,Unimatic Engineers Ltd,GE (General Electric Company) UK,Bovis Lend Lease,Northern Powergrid (United Kingdom),BAE Systems (United Kingdom),Amersham PLC,Atkins UK,ASYLUM RESEARCH UK LTD,[no title available],Autoliv Ltd,Halliburton KBR,Epigem Ltd,Unipath Ltd,GKN Aerospace Services Ltd,Doncasters Plc,Ministry of Defence MOD,LONDON UNDERGROUND LIMITED,Bae Systems Defence Ltd,CYTEC ENGINEERED MATERIALS LIMITED,Ove Arup & Partners Ltd,Cranfield University,Shell Research UK,AWE,National Blood Service,Castrol UK Ltd,Unilever Corporate Research,BP International,Delcam International plc,Cytec Engineered Materials,Bernard Matthews (United Kingdom),AIRBUS OPERATIONS LIMITED,UNILEVER U.K. CENTRAL RESOURCES LIMITED,Galorath Affiliates Ltd,VBC Group,Control 2K Ltd,Shell Research UK,NPL,National Physical Laboratory,De Montfort University,National Blood Service,LG Mouchel and Partners,DSTL,Battenfeld U K Ltd,VBC Group,Contour Fine Tooling Ltd,Atkins UK,Lockheed Martin UK,Epigem Ltd (Middlesbrough),Saint-Gobain Abrasives,Saint-Gobain Abrasives,Instem Computer Systems,Alere Limited (UK),Renold Precision Technologies,BAE Systems (Sweden),Lend Lease,GE Aviation,Lotus Engineering Ltd,Airbus,Air Liquide (France),Airbus (Netherlands),Arup Group Ltd,NHS Blood and Transplant NHSBT,BP British Petroleum,ArvinMeritor Automotive Light Vehicle,Alcoa Europe Flat Rolled Products,Autoliv Ltd,Michigan State University,Amersham plc,LCP Consulting Limited,Lockheed Martin,Delcam (United Kingdom),Edwards,Castrol UK Ltd,Scott Bader,MG Rover Group Ltd,East of England Development Agency,CRANFIELD UNIVERSITY,CONTOUR FINE TOOLING LIMITED,BAE Systems,DMU,Lotus Cars Ltd,Air Liquide (France),Bombardier Aerospace,TATA Motors Engineering Technical Centre,Technology Partnership Plc (The),Doncasters Plc,GE Fanuc Europe SA - UK Branch,AWE Aldermaston,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,ArvinMeritor Automotive Light Vehicle,MG Rover Group Limited,ROLLS-ROYCE PLC,JAGUAR LAND ROVER LIMITED,BOC Edwards,Cognition Europe,Rolls-Royce Fuel Cell Systems Ltd,Tecan Components Ltd,Control 2K Ltd,Renold Precision Technologies,Scott Bader Company Ltd,Battenfeld U K Ltd,Airbus (United Kingdom),Delcam International plc,Tecan Components Ltd,Epigem Ltd,Airbus (United Kingdom),Accuromm UK Ltd,Halliburton KBR,Holroyd Machine Tools Gears &,GKN Aerospace,Alcoa Europe Flat Rolled ProductsFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/E001874/1Funder Contribution: 9,770,800 GBPThe Cranfield IMRC vision is to grow the existing world class research activity through the development and interaction between:Manufacturing Technologies and Product/Service Systems that move UK manufacturing up the value chain to provide high added value manufacturing business opportunities.This research vision builds on the existing strengths and expertise at Cranfield and is complementary to the activities at other IMRCs. It represents a unique combination of manufacturing research skills and resource that will address key aspects of the UK's future manufacturing needs. The research is multi-disciplinary and cross-sectoral and is designed to promote knowledge transfer between sectors. To realise this vision the Cranfield IMRC has two interdependent strategic aims which will be pursued simultaneously:1.To produce world/beating process and product technologies in the areas of precision engineering and materials processing.2.To enable the creation and exploitation of these technologies within the context of service/based competitive strategies.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2008 - 2014Partners:University of Aberdeen, Heriot-Watt University, Mott Macdonald UK Ltd, C-Questor, Air Liquide (France) +11 partnersUniversity of Aberdeen,Heriot-Watt University,Mott Macdonald UK Ltd,C-Questor,Air Liquide (France),World Wide Fund for Nature WWF (UK),Scottish Enterpise,WWF,C-Questor,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),Doosan (United Kingdom),Doosan Babcock Energy Limited,Air Liquide (France),Doosan Babcock Energy Limited,Scottish Enterpise,Heriot-Watt UniversityFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/F034482/1Funder Contribution: 1,089,230 GBPEnergy supply for the UK, and for the world, will experience major changes during the next 20 years. Many nations seek secure energy supplies, combined with low costs, and sustainable environmental impacts. Most of world energy currently derives from combustion of fossil fuel. The UK is no exception.In the UK, fossil fuel (oil) dominates transport use, and is difficult to change in the near future. Electricity and heat generation is dominated by gas (41%) and coal (34%), with 20% from nuclear, only 3% from renewables, and 2% imported electricity. This gas and coal will from now onwards largely be imported, paying costs to suppliers outside the UK. This also means security of supply is not guaranteed. Can improvements be made to the use of these energy sources?A key environmental problem is that fossil fuel combustion releases fossil CO2 to the atmosphere. This is now, beyond reasonable doubt, linked to global warming and climate change. Atmospheric CO2 also dissolves in ocean water, forcing an increased acidity greater than any time in the past 20 Million years. Even those who still do not believe in climate change cannot escape the inevitability of ocean acidification / with as yet un-predicted consequences. For this reason alone, atmospheric CO2 must be reduced.To enable continued use of fossil fuels, whilst renewable sources are developed, it is an urgent requirement to de-carbonise their combustion. The Stern Review of Climate Change Economics in 2006 clearly re-stated that significant progress must be made during the ten years until 2017.This research proposition addresses the fossil fuel issues in two ways: Firstly, to create a UK Centre of university expertise in the capture of CO2 from power plant. Current industrial systems rely on chemical absorption by solvents, but require a very high energy input, which reduces the environmental gain. The Centre will focus on new technologies of CO2 separation by adsorption onto nanoporous materials materials, by filtration of CO2 from power plant flue gases by newly created semi-permeable membranes, and by membrane separation of oxygen from air, to enable oxy-fuel combustion and efficient CO2 separation.Secondly, we acknowledge that there is, and will be, a need to remove existing CO2 emissions from the atmosphere. The reductions proposed from power plant emissions do not reduce existing CO2, they just make the increase slower. To control the earth atmosphere and produce a sustainable climate requires extraction of CO2 already emitted. This is routinely achieved, at low cost, by vegetation. We will create an entirely new centre of university expertise which will focus on using bio-mass from agriculture, forestry and waste. This can firstly make bio-fuel to replace fossil sources, and the residues can be pyrolised to form charcoal. Such charcoal has been used in traditional cultures to enhance soil fertility, and locks up carbon for thousands of years. Improvements in land use in the EU, USA, and developing world can achieve this, by an integration of engineering, soil science, and social benefit to cultivators.The University of Edinburgh and Heriot-Watt University already host the UK's largest academic centre investigating the geological burial of CO2 captured from power plant. There are existing multi-skilled networks in Edinburgh linking land use, agriculture, social, legal and economic analysis, chemical engineering and petroleum geoscience. Creation of the Carbon Capture Centre will be an ideal complementary activity, and the range of expertise, from atmospheric capture, to power-plant capture to cultivation and geological burial will be unique.Outputs from the Centre can help the UK to combust coal and gas with environmentally clean methods, to enhance energy security by diversifying away from fossil fuel sources, and to commence the direct clean-up of CO2 from the atmosphere in a energy efficient, and financially efficient, sustainable way.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2008 - 2014Partners:Scottish Enterpise, C-Questor, Air Liquide (France), World Wide Fund for Nature WWF (UK), Air Liquide (France) +10 partnersScottish Enterpise,C-Questor,Air Liquide (France),World Wide Fund for Nature WWF (UK),Air Liquide (France),Mott Macdonald UK Ltd,University of Edinburgh,Doosan Babcock Energy Limited,C-Questor,WWF,Doosan (United Kingdom),Doosan Babcock Energy Limited,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),Scottish Enterpise,University of AberdeenFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/F034520/1Funder Contribution: 3,452,950 GBPEnergy supply for the UK, and for the World as a whole, will experience major changes during the next 20 years, as states seek secure energy supplies, combined with low costs, and sustainable environmental impacts. Most of world energy currently derives from combustion of fossil fuel. The UK is no exception.In the UK, fossil fuel (oil) dominates transport use, and this is unlikely to change in the near future. Electricity and heat generation is dominated by gas (41%) and coal (34%), with 20% from nuclear, only 3% from renewables, and 2% imported electricity. This gas and coal will from now onwards largely be imported, paying costs to suppliers outside the UK. This also means security of supply is not guaranteed. Can improvements be made to the use of these energy sources?A key environmental problem is that fossil fuel combustion releases CO2 to the atmosphere. This is now, beyond reasonable doubt, linked to global warming and climate change. Atmospheric CO2 also dissolves in ocean water, forcing an increased acidity greater than any time in the past 20 Million years. Even those who still do not believe in climate change cannot escape the inevitability of ocean acidification / with as yet un-predicted consequences. For this reason alone, atmospheric CO2 must be reduced.To enable continued use of fossil fuels it is an urgent requirement to de-carbonise their combustion. The Stern Review of Climate Change Economics in 2006 clearly re-stated that significant progress must be made during the ten years until 2017.This research proposal addresses the fossil fuel issues in two ways: Firstly, to create a UK Centre of university expertise in the capture of CO2 from power plants. Current industrial systems rely on chemical absorption by solvents, but require a very high energy input, which reduces the environmental gain. The Centre will focus on new technologies of CO2 separation by adsorption onto nanoporous materials, by filtration of CO2 from power plant flue gases by semi-permeable membranes, and by membrane and adsorption separation processes for the production of oxygen from air, to enable oxy-fuel combustion and efficient CO2 separation.Secondly, we acknowledge that there is, and will be, a need to remove existing CO2 emissions from the atmosphere. The reductions proposed from power plant emissions do not reduce existing CO2, but rather just make the increase slower. To control the earth atmosphere and produce a sustainable climate requires extraction of CO2 already emitted. This is routinely achieved, at low cost, by vegetation. We will create an entirely new centre of university expertise which will focus on using bio-mass from agriculture, forestry and waste. This can firstly make bio-fuel to replace fossil sources, and the residues can be pyrolised to form charcoal. Such charcoal has been used in traditional cultures to enhance soil fertility, and locks up carbon for thousands of years. Improvements in land use in the EU, the USA, and developing world can achieve this, by an integration of engineering, soil science, and social benefit to cultivators.Edinburgh (with the British Geological Survey and Heriot-Watt) already hosts the UK's largest academic centre investigating geological burial of captured CO2. There are existing multi-skilled networks at Edinburgh linking land use, agriculture, social, legal and economic analysis, chemical engineering and petroleum geoscience. Creation of the Carbon Capture Centre will be an ideal complementary activity, and the range of expertise, from atmospheric capture, to power-plant capture to cultivation and geological burial will be unique.Outputs from the Centre can help the UK to combust coal and gas with environmentally clean methods, to enhance energy security by diversifying away from fossil fuel sources, and to commence the direct clean-up of CO2 from the atmosphere in an energy and financially efficient, sustainable way.
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