Friday, June 16, 2023

MIT engineers develop a soft, printable, metal-free electrode

A new Jell-O-like material could replace metals as electrical interfaces for pacemakers, cochlear implants, and other electronic implants.

Do an image search for “electronic implants,” and you’ll draw up a wide assortment of devices, from traditional pacemakers and cochlear implants to more futuristic brain and retinal microchips aimed at augmenting vision, treating depression, and restoring mobility.






Some implants are hard and bulky, while others are flexible and thin. But no matter their form and function, nearly all implants incorporate electrodes — small conductive elements that attach directly to target tissues to electrically stimulate muscles and nerves.

Implantable electrodes are predominantly made from rigid metals that are electrically conductive by nature. But over time, metals can aggravate tissues, causing scarring and inflammation that in turn can degrade an implant’s performance.

Now, MIT engineers have developed a metal-free, Jell-O-like material that is as soft and tough as biological tissue and can conduct electricity similarly to conventional metals. The material can be made into a printable ink, which the researchers patterned into flexible, rubbery electrodes. The new material, which is a type of high-performance conducting polymer hydrogel, may one day replace metals as functional, gel-based electrodes, with the look and feel of biological tissue.

“This material operates like metal electrodes but is made from gels that are similar to our bodies, and with similar water content,” says Hyunwoo Yuk SM ’16, PhD ’21, co-founder of SanaHeal, a medical device startup. “It’s like an artificial tissue or nerve.”

“We believe that for the first time, we have a tough, robust, Jell-O-like electrode that can potentially replace metal to stimulate nerves and interface with the heart, brain, and other organs in the body,” adds Xuanhe Zhao, professor of mechanical engineering and of civil and environmental engineering at MIT.

Zhao, Yuk, and others at MIT and elsewhere report their results today in Nature Materials. The study’s co-authors include first author and former MIT postdoc Tao Zhou, who is now an assistant professor at Penn State University, and colleagues at Jiangxi Science and Technology Normal University and Shanghai Jiao Tong University.

A true challenge

The vast majority of polymers are insulating by nature, meaning that electricity does not pass easily through them. But there exists a small and special class of polymers that can in fact pass electrons through their bulk. Some conductive polymers were first shown to exhibit high electrical conductivity in the 1970s — work that was later awarded a Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

Recently, researchers including those in Zhao’s lab have tried using conductive polymers to fabricate soft, metal-free electrodes for use in bioelectronic implants and other medical devices. These efforts have aimed to make soft yet tough, electrically conductive films and patches, primarily by mixing particles of conductive polymers, with hydrogel — a type of soft and spongy water-rich polymer.

Researchers hoped the combination of conductive polymer and hydrogel would yield a flexible, biocompatible, and electrically conductive gel. But the materials made to date were either too weak and brittle, or they exhibited poor electrical performance.

“In gel materials, the electrical and mechanical properties always fight each other,” Yuk says. “If you improve a gel’s electrical properties, you have to sacrifice mechanical properties, and vice versa. But in reality, we need both: A material should be conductive, and also stretchy and robust. That was the true challenge and the reason why people could not make conductive polymers into reliable devices entirely made out of gel.”

Electric spaghetti

In their new study, Yuk and his colleagues found they needed a new recipe to mix conductive polymers with hydrogels in a way that enhanced both the electrical and mechanical properties of the respective ingredients.

“People previously relied on homogenous, random mixing of the two materials,” Yuk says.

Such mixtures produced gels made of randomly dispersed polymer particles. The group realized that to preserve the electrical and mechanical strengths of the conductive polymer and the hydrogel respectively, both ingredients should be mixed in a way that they slightly repel — a state known as phase separation. In this slightly separated state, each ingredient could then link its respective polymers to form long, microscopic strands, while also mixing as a whole. 

“Imagine we are making electrical and mechanical spaghetti,” Zhao offers. “The electrical spaghetti is the conductive polymer, which can now transmit electricity across the material because it is continuous. And the mechanical spaghetti is the hydrogel, which can transmit mechanical forces and be tough and stretchy because it is also continuous.”

The researchers then tweaked the recipe to cook the spaghettified gel into an ink, which they fed through a 3D printer, and printed onto films of pure hydrogel, in patterns similar to conventional metal electrodes.

“Because this gel is 3D-printable, we can customize geometries and shapes, which makes it easy to fabricate electrical interfaces for all kinds of organs,” says first-author Zhou.

The researchers then implanted the printed, Jell-O-like electrodes onto the heart, sciatic nerve, and spinal cord of rats. The team tested the electrodes’ electrical and mechanical performance in the animals for up to two months and found the devices remained stable throughout, with little inflammation or scarring to the surrounding tissues. The electrodes also were able to relay electrical pulses from the heart to an external monitor, as well as deliver small pulses to the sciatic nerve and spinal cord, which in turn stimulated motor activity in the associated muscles and limbs.

Going forward, Yuk envisions that an immediate application for the new material may be for people recovering from heart surgery.

“These patients need a few weeks of electrical support to avoid heart attack as a side effect of surgery,” Yuk says. “So, doctors stitch a metallic electrode on the surface of the heart and stimulate it over weeks. We may replace those metal electrodes with our gel to minimize complications and side effects that people currently just accept.”

The team is working to extend the material’s lifetime and performance. Then, the gel could be used as a soft electrical interface between organs and longer-term implants, including pacemakers and deep-brain stimulators.

“The goal of our group is to replace glass, ceramic, and metal inside the body, with something like Jell-O so it’s more benign but better performance, and can last a long time,” Zhao says. “That’s our hope.”

This research is supported, in part, by the National Institutes of Health.

Husky Installs First Integrated IM System for Blood Collection Tube Production in India

Husky Technologies™, a pioneering technology provider enabling the delivery of essential needs to the global community, announced the installation of the first integrated injection molding system for blood collection tube (BCT) production in India.

This new installation is at the facilities of CML Biotech Limited, one of the largest BCT manufacturers in the country.


Can be Monitored in Real-time:

Based on the manufacturing challenges identified by CML Biotech, Husky recommended the ICHOR™ injection molding system with its world-renowned PET technology expertise, having delivered over 3,000 high cavitation, fully integrated PET systems to the global market, and Schöttli™ High Precision Medical Molds, the ICHOR system will enable CML Biotech to improve part quality, weight variations, cycle times, and overall efficiency of the BCT production process.


The ICHOR™ system is the first of its kind in the medical injection molding industry in India. It will be monitored in real-time through Advantage+Elite™, Husky's proactive, predictive, and transparent monitoring solution. This will ensure that the performance of the system is fully optimized, and any potential issues are detected before they impact production.


"We sought a trusted supplier, who understood our business and our challenges. We found this in working together with Husky”, says Mr. Paul Jacob, managing director of CML Group. "It’s not just about producing a BCT for the local market, it is about producing the highest quality BCT in India for the global market”.


“Husky is honored to work with CML Biotech on this significant project," says Thomas Bontempi, head of Medical Business Development at Husky. "Our goal was to enable them to grow their business by offering an integrated medical injection molding system that provides end-to-end visibility on the manufacturing process combined with proactive, predictive and transparent monitoring that assures consistent performance and optimal production. ICHOR™ offers new levels of performance and efficiencies in part quality and cost, weight variations and cycle time”.


This collaboration signifies Husky’s ongoing commitment to transforming the manufacturing process of blood collection tubes, and other medical devices, while making a positive impact on healthcare globally.


Source: Husky/Omnexus-Specialchem

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#polymers #plasticsindustry #injectionmolding #bloodcollectiontube

#cmlbiotech #husky #ICHOR #performance #efficiency #diagnostics

#hospitals #manufacturing #healthcare

Thursday, June 15, 2023

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share:The World’s Biggest Wind Turbines

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share:

The World’s Biggest Wind Turbines 

Wind generated 6.6% of the world’s electricity in 2021, up from 3.5% in 2015, when the Paris Agreement was signed, making it the fastest-growing source of electricity after solar.









A number of countries have achieved relatively high levels of wind energy penetration in their electricity grids.


Wind’s share of electricity generation was nearly 50% in Denmark and sits above 25% in countries such as Ireland, Uruguay, and Portugal. In the United States, wind supplied 8.4% and closer to 10% in India of total electricity generation.


The global wind turbine market size was valued at $53.4 billion in 2020 and is projected to reach $98.4 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 6.3%.


As one of the fastest-growing segments of the energy sector, wind energy generation will continue to grow as wind turbines also scale up in size.


Source:Thailys magalhaes/windmarket

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#windenergy #energy #composites #electricity #windturbine #windpower #windfarm #alternativeenergy #carbonneutral #ge #siemensgamesa #vestas #mingyang

EU Project to Valorize Slaughterhouse Waste to Produce Cost-efficient PHAs

 

AIMPLAS, coordinates a new European project to valorize slaughterhouse waste (bellygrass or rumen content) and paper and pulp sludge, to produce cost-efficient polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) for agricultural and personal care applications, by the coprocessing with other organic wastes (OW) such as sludge from the dairy industry and glycerol from the biodiesel industry, as well as recovering nutrients to produce bio-based fertilizers (BBFs).



New Avenues for Bioplastics Production
On 17th-18th May AIMPLAS hosted the ELLIPSE project Kick-off Meeting (KoM) to show the different activities to be performed during the project timeframe. This research is funded by the European Union under the Circular Bio-based Joint Undertaking (CBE JU) call HORIZON-JU-CBE-2022-IA-04. For its deployment it has been allocated 5,509,655.50€ over a 48-months period.

The ELLIPSE project will address the valorization of two heterogeneous waste streams generated in significant amounts in Europe, slaughterhouse waste and paper and pulp sludge, for agricultural and personal care applications. The integration of these waste streams as biorefinery feedstocks will allow reducing the volumes of landfilled waste, opening new avenues for platform chemicals and bioplastics production while creating additional revenue for the related industries generating them, with added advantages of water recycling, decreased soil degradation, groundwater pollution and methane emissions. The selected ELLIPSE feedstocks are locally available and renewable leading to close to 100% renewably sourced personal care packaging and agricultural products.

ELLIPSE project will be able to cope with at least 100 tons of slaughterhouse waste and 20 tons of wastewater sludge derived from pulp and paper industry. The ELLIPSE technology will impact in the European bioeconomy by valorizing 20,000 tons of rumen content waste and 50,000 tons of paper sludge per year.

ELLIPSE consortium includes 13 partners, all of them relevant actors in the bio-based system from the waste stream production and management (Green Generation and Heinzelpaper) to technology developers (AIMPLAS, Università di Verona, CARTIF, Bioenergy and Sustainable Technologies – BEST) and industrial actors, both SMEs (Biotrend, Bio-Mi, ZER0 Emissions Engineering, Helian Polymers) and bigger companies (Bio Base Europe Pilot Plant, Novamont). Furthermore, ELLIPSE can count on the expertise of ENCO for the market development perspective and ZER0 Emissions Engineering for the analysis of the end-user and consumer’s perspective.

Source: AIMPLAS/Omnexus-specialchem
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#bioplastics #polyhydroxyalkonoates #zeroemissions #waste #watertreatment #slaughterhouse #paper #pulp #manufacturing #recycling

Wednesday, June 14, 2023

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share:On solar panels: our latest mountain of waste

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share:

It is often the case with environmental problems that they are ignored until they are overwhelming us. And so it goes with solar panels, which will emerge as the pre-eminent waste issue du jour when the first generation of #pvpanels installed in the early 2000s reaches the end of its useful life around 2030.






Unlike wind turbines, which are made of homogenous and relatively easy to recycle materials, solar panels are a complex, multilayered fusion of glass, silicon and minerals such as silver and copper. The International Energy Agency predicted in a 2016 report that #australia will generate 145,000 tonnes of PV panel waste by 2030, although this figure is now almost certainly higher given the exponential popularity of utility scale solar installations since then.

Put in a more visually appealing way, if the disused solar panels were stacked on top of each other, they would look like 241 Mount Everests. And that’s just the waste coming from Australia, which makes up only a fraction of the global solar market.


Predictably, very little has been done to foster a circular PV panel economy until recently because the 2030 crunch point seemed so far away. But experts say Australia has a lot of catching up to do before it will have the capacity to adequately recover the contents of the PV panels that will need to be recycled in coming years.


What’s being done about it?

There have been encouraging signs from state and federal governments. New South Wales last year handed out $10 million in grants from the Circular Solar program to spur investment in recycling technologies, and the federal government is gradually developing a product stewardship scheme with industry partners that will include R&D and funds to support a domestic PV recycling industry.


Can’t we R&D our way out of this?

On first glance, chemical recycling techniques sound like a magic bullet solution because they can extract critical minerals from the panels. In France a facility called ROSI, which will open at the end of June, claims to be able to extract 99 per cent of a panel’s material, including the silver. However, chemical recycling techniques have largely not been commercialised because they are expensive and involve large amounts of energy. And they are not environmentally friendly. 

“Chemical recycling is not an easy process because you are left with toxic by-products and waste. We need to think about downstream impact of chemical processing and devise a circular solution for the solar industry,” Petesic told The Fifth Estate.

Another difficulty with recycling is to ensure the various components of panels are not contaminated, so they can be reused to make new high-grade materials. For this reason, recycling processes that involve crushing panels and using electromagnets to recover the precious materials are viewed as inferior.


Source:thefifthestate.com.au

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#recycling #pvpanels #solar


ZEMU Making United States Debut

 On October 24, 2022, the San Bernardino County Transportation Authority (SBCTA), in partnership with the Southern California Regional Rail Authority, expanded the public transit network in the San Bernardino Valley. This addition to the network is primarily using the state-of-the-art Arrow diesel multiple units (DMUs). One of SBCTA’s initiatives, however, is to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and improve air quality. The Arrow DMUs are powered via a Tier 4 diesel engine “generator” that provides power to electric motors at the wheels.








Taking it one step further, SBCTA recognized an opportunity to convert the power generator to an alternative propulsion technology in an effort to produce a low or zero emission multiple unit (ZEMU) that could run on the existing heavy rail infrastructure, thus reducing air quality impacts while furthering the use of existing rail infrastructure. And, with the funding support from the California State Transportation Agency (CalSTA), the innovative solution of a zero-emission multiple unit (ZEMU) was launched.

In November 2019, the contract with Stadler US, Inc. (Stadler) for the production of the ZEMU was executed. Design of the vehicle commenced shortly after the contract execution and Stadler began manufacturing of the vehicle in the summer of 2021 with components similar to the DMUs and while further refining the hydrogen propulsion technology. The ZEMU vehicle assembly was completed in mid-2022 and unveiled at InnoTrans, an international trade and visitor fair for transport technology, in September 2022. Dynamic testing in Switzerland began in December 2022 and is wrapping up in preparation for shipment to the United States at the end of June 2023.

Staff is still working through scheduling and logistical details for testing, and the manufacturer is looking to showcase the vehicle at the American Public Transportation Association (APTA) TRANSform Conference & Expo (APTA Expo) in Orlando, Florida, in October – bringing even more recognition for SBCTA and CalSTA as innovators in transportation solutions. Integration into Metrolink’s revenue service in San Bernardino County’s east valley is anticipated for late 2024.

Source:www.gosbcta.com
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#train #hydrogen #carbonneutral #alternativeenergy #technology #manufacturing #network #gas #collaboration #transport #testing #transportation #design #ZEMU #stadler #infrastructure #power #quality

Sunday's THOUGHTFUL POST : THE “BENT KEY PRINCIPLE”

 🔑 THE “BENT KEY PRINCIPLE” How a Tiny Mistake Inside Toyota’s Factory Created One of the Most Powerful Ideas in Modern Business In the ear...