Tuesday, June 7, 2022

Type 4 composite Cylinder Project report is available

 This report has covered the following topics

  •  An overview landscape of the market, 
  • Swot analysis, 
  • Latest technological advancements, 
  • Certification, 
  • Merger & Acquisition 
  • Investment structure, 
  • costing and certification, 
  • Major players share, 
  • Global NGVs market, 
  • Type 4 cylinder market in India and the rest of the world, 
  • The durability of the Type 4 cylinder
  • Project cost to set up a manufacturing line, 
  • Economic efficiency & safety, 
  • The business scope of the Hydrogen cylinder market, 
  • The Future Trends 



Interested companies do write to me by email at rosaram211@gmail.com to get more information on the pricing. Thanks.

Visit MY BLOG https://lnkd.in/fcSeK9e

India to gain $6.7m green hydrogen and green ammonia project

 A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between India-based renewable energy company ACME Group and the Government of Karnataka will see an RS52,000 crore ($6.7m) green hydrogen and green ammonia project set up in the Indian state.

The project plans to produce 1.2 million tonnes of green hydrogen and ammonia per year, with an additional ‘captive solar unit’. ACME Group has said construction will take place between 2022 and 2027.

Over the past year, India’s interest in hydrogen has dramatically increased, with the unveiling of the country’s National Hydrogen Mission, which plans to cut carbon emissions and meet its climate targets.


Manoj Kr Upadhyay, founder, and Chairman of ACME Group said, “We are delighted to partner with the State of Karnataka in developing one of the largest and earliest green ammonia projects in the world.




We will be a formidable player in accelerating the adoption of green fuel globally. We are grateful to the Government of Karnataka for their vision of building the state as a green hydrogen hub and extending their full support to this project.”

H2 View understands the Government of Karnataka will facilitate ACME Group in obtaining registration, approvals, and clearances.


Basavaraj Bommai, Chief Minister of Karnataka, commented, “It has been proved again that Karnataka is the most ideal destination for investments.

“Karnataka has been successful in drawing the highest Foreign Direct Investments (FDI) among the states in the country. The FDI inflow during the last three quarters is testimony to this achievement.”


Source:h2-view.com

Visit MY BLOG http://polymerguru.blogspot.com



Sunday, June 5, 2022

Saturday, June 4, 2022

Team Effort

 Teamwork is the ability to work together toward a common vision. The ability to direct individual accomplishments toward organizational objectives. It is the fuel that allows common people to attain uncommon results.



Visit MY BLOG https://lnkd.in/fcSeK9e

Friday, June 3, 2022

Car tyres produce vastly more particle pollution than exhausts, tests show

 Almost 2,000 times more particle pollution is produced by tyre wear than is pumped out of the exhausts of modern cars, tests have shown.

The tyre particles pollute the air, water and soil and contain a wide range of toxic organic compounds, including known carcinogens, the analysts say, suggesting tyre pollution could rapidly become a major issue for regulators.




Air pollution causes millions of early deaths a year globally. The requirement for better filters has meant particle emissions from tailpipes in developed countries are now much lower in new cars, with those in Europe far below the legal limit. However, the increasing weight of cars means more particles are being thrown off by tyres as they wear on the road.

The tests also revealed that tyres produce more than 1tn ultrafine particles for each kilometre driven, meaning particles smaller than 23 nanometres. These are also emitted from exhausts and are of special concern to health, as their size means they can enter organs via the bloodstream. Particles below 23nm are hard to measure and are not currently regulated in either the EU or US.

“Tyres are rapidly eclipsing the tailpipe as a major source of emissions from vehicles,” said Nick Molden, at Emissions Analytics, the leading independent emissions testing company that did the research. “Tailpipes are now so clean for pollutants that, if you were starting out afresh, you wouldn’t even bother regulating them.”

Molden said an initial estimate of tyre particle emissions prompted the new work. “We came to a bewildering amount of material being released into the environment – 300,000 tonnes of tyre rubber in the UK and US, just from cars and vans every year.”

There are currently no regulations on the wear rate of tyres and little regulation on the chemicals they contain. Emissions Analytics has now determined the chemicals present in 250 different types of tyres, which are usually made from synthetic rubber, derived from crude oil. “There are hundreds and hundreds of chemicals, many of which are carcinogenic,” Molden said. “When you multiply it by the total wear rates, you get to some very staggering figures as to what’s being released.”

The wear rate of different tyre brands varied substantially and the toxic chemical content varied, even more, he said, showing low-cost changes were feasible to cut their environmental impact.

“You could do a lot by eliminating the most toxic tyres,” he said. “It’s not about stopping people driving, or having to invent completely different new tyres. If you could eliminate the worst half, and maybe bring them in line with the best in class, you can make a massive difference. But at the moment, there’s no regulatory tool, there’s no surveillance.”

The tests of tyre wear were done on 14 different brands using a Mercedes C-Class driven normally on the road, with some tested over their full lifetime. High-precision scales measured the weight lost by the tyres and a sampling system that collects particles behind the tyres while driving assessed the mass, number and size of particles, down to 6nm. The real-world exhaust emissions were measured across four petrol SUVs, the most popular new cars today, using models from 2019 and 2020.

Used tyres produced 36 milligrams of particles each kilometre, 1,850 times higher than the 0.02 mg/km average from the exhausts. A very aggressive – though legal – driving style sent particle emissions soaring, to 5,760 mg/km.

Far more small particles are produced by the tyres than large ones. This means that while the vast majority of the particles by number are small enough to become airborne and contribute to air pollution, these represent only 11% of the particles by weight. Nonetheless, tyres still produce hundreds of times more airborne particles by weight than exhausts.

Source:The Guardian

Thursday, June 2, 2022

The enzyme discovered that breaks down PET in less than a day

 German chemists have discovered a highly efficient enzyme that breaks down PET, one of the most used types of plastic in the world, in record time.


Christian Sonnendecker and his colleagues at the University of Leipzig identified the enzyme, along with several others, in a compost pile.

The plastic-eating enzyme could make biological recycling of PET (polyethylene terephthalate) possible much faster than previously thought possible. It was named PHL7.




Bacteria naturally use enzymes to break down plant parts and feed themselves. It has also been known for some time that some enzymes, so-called polyester-cleaving hydrolases, can also degrade plastics. For example, the enzyme LCC, discovered by Japanese researchers, is considered a particularly effective "plastic eater" - there are also fungi that degrade PET.


What distinguishes the new enzyme identified now is its speed of action.

In the experiments, the researchers added PET to containers with an aqueous solution containing the newly identified PHL7 or the well-known LCC, the previous leader in PET decomposition. Then they measured the amount of plastic that had degraded in a given period of time and compared the values ​​to each other.






The result: Within 16 hours, PHL7 caused the PET to decompose by 90%; at the same time, LCC achieved a degradation of only half of that, 45%.

"Therefore, our enzyme is twice as active as the gold standard among the polyester cleavage hydrolases," Sonnendecker stressed. "For example, PHL7 broke a plastic container - the kind used to sell grapes in supermarkets - in less than 24 hours."

The researchers found that a single enzyme building block is responsible for this above-average activity. Where other previously known polyester cleavage hydrolases contain a phenylalanine residue, PHL7 has a leucine. 


Biological recycling of PET has advantages over conventional recycling methods, which are primarily based on thermal processes, where plastic waste is melted down for reuse. These processes are highly energy-intensive and the quality of the plastic declines with each recycling cycle.

Enzymes, on the other hand, only require an aqueous environment and a temperature of 65 to 70 degrees Celsius to do their job. Another advantage is that it breaks down PET into its terephthalic acid and ethylene glycol components, which can be reused to produce new PET, without loss of quality, resulting in a closed-loop. So far, however, the biological recycling of PET has only been tested by a pilot plant in France.

The German team is now carrying out experiments for the degradation of PET bottles using the enzyme - compared to fruit and another packaging, typically "crystalline", PET bottles have additives that make their degradation more complicated.


Source:Article: Low Carbon Footprint Recycling of Post-Consumer PET Plastic with a Metagenomic Polyester Hydrolase



Wednesday, June 1, 2022

CHINA BATTERY MARKET IN CHINA

According to BMI figures, china is ten times the combined number in Europe and North America. At present 125 batteries, Giga factories are more active in producing batteries. In each province, construction is taking place in China. Most large corporations are eying the Chinese market for investing in various projects.






Source:https://flo.uri.sh/visualisation/8675841/embed


The BIOVALSA project: making bioplastics from agricultural waste and pruning residues

Every year, the Valencian agricultural sector generates around 800 000 tons of plant waste, such as rice straw and citrus pruning waste. The...