Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share:4,000% boost! Eco-friendly hydrogen on the horizon

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

A team of researchers led by Ryuhei Nakamura at the RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science (CSRS) in Japan has made significant strides in the field of sustainable hydrogen extraction. Their research, published in Nature Catalysis, details an innovative method of extracting hydrogen from water using a custom-made catalyst. By manipulating the catalyst’s 3D structure, they achieved a remarkable increase in stability and extended the catalyst’s lifetime by nearly 4,000%. This breakthrough has profound implications for the establishment of a sustainable hydrogen-based energy economy.

Water electrolysis using proton exchange membranes (PEMs) is a green electrochemical process that splits water into oxygen and hydrogen. The hydrogen produced can be stored and used later, for instance, to power an electric car when combined with a PEM fuel cell. However, PEM electrolysis has limitations that hinder its widespread industrial use, such as in power plants.


The chemical reactions necessary for this process occur in a highly acidic environment, and the most effective catalysts for these reactions are extremely rare earth metals like iridium. Nakamura explains, “Scaling up PEM electrolysis to the terawatt scale would require 40 years’ worth of iridium, which is certainly impractical and highly unsustainable.”


A breakthrough in acid-water electrolysis:

Nearly two years ago, Nakamura and his team developed a groundbreaking process that enabled acid water electrolysis without relying on rare earth metals. By inserting manganese into a cobalt oxide lattice, they created a process that depended solely on common and sustainable earth metals. Despite the success, the process was not as stable as required in a PEM electrolyzer. Building on their previous discovery, they have now developed a longer-lasting, earth-abundant catalyst.


The new catalyst is a form of manganese oxide (MnO2). The researchers found that the reaction stability could be increased over 40 times by altering the catalyst’s lattice structure. Oxygen in the 3D lattice structure of manganese oxide comes in two configurations: planar and pyramidal. The planar version forms stronger bonds with manganese, and the researchers discovered that increasing the amount of planar oxygen in the lattice significantly enhanced catalytic stability.


Testing and results:

The team tested four different manganese oxides, which varied in the percentage of planar oxygen. When using the version with the highest achievable percentage, 94%, the critical oxygen evolution reaction could be maintained in acid for one month at 1000 mA/cm2. The total amount of charge transferred in this case was 100 times more than anything seen in previous studies.


When tested in a PEM electrolyzer, water electrolysis could be sustained for about six weeks at 200 mA/cm2. The total amount of water electrolyzed in this time period, and therefore the amount of hydrogen produced, was ten times more than has been achieved in the past with other non-rare metal catalysts. Co-first author Shuang Kong notes, “Surprisingly, the improved stability did not come at a cost in activity, which is usually the case. A PEM water electrolyzer that generates hydrogen with an earth-abundant catalyst at a rate of 200 mA/cm2 is highly efficient.”


The road ahead:

While there is still work to be done, the researchers are optimistic about the potential for tangible, real-world applications that contribute to carbon neutrality. Industrial applications typically require a stable current density of 1000 mA/cm2 that lasts for several years, rather than a month. However, Nakamura is confident about the future, stating, “We will continue to modify catalyst structure to increase both current density and catalyst lifetime. In the long-term, our efforts should help achieve the ultimate objective for all stakeholders – to conduct PEM water electrolysis without the use of iridium.”


source:interestingenginnering

Asahi Kasei Plastics North America to Highlight its New 3D Printing Filament at NPE 2024

Asahi Kasei Plastics North America (APNA) will highlight new technologies, such as its 3D printing filament, at the NPE 2024, at booth S14012.


m-PPE Filaments as Replacement of PC-ABS and PEI:

The latest announcement from APNA involved the launch of a new 3D printing product. At NPE, APNA will showcase multiple filaments from their award-winning resins for the first time. These products meet customers’ needs in an industry that has become increasingly prominent within industrial, aerospace, and automotive manufacturing processes.


The first line of the new filaments is made from XYRON™, APNA’s modified polyphenylene ether resin (m-PPE). It is known for its excellent balance of heat resistance and impact strength. This material replaces polycarbonate–acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (PC-ABS), and polyetherimide (PEI) alternatives in various applications. The second line is made from Thermylene® polypropylene (PP) resin. It offers high strength and stiffness, does not require drying, and has lower warpage compared to traditional unfilled polypropylene alternatives.


APNA will also unveil a dedicated sustainability kiosk at its booth. It will showcase its feed stream diversity and new recycled grade series. Thermylene® R polypropylene compounds are the first of the series, which aim to lower carbon footprints while providing lower density, chemical resistance, and superior strength. Thermylon® R polyamide compounds are also designed to reduce carbon footprint. These offer benefits like high-temperature use and stiffness for metal replacement applications. Both lines aim to address the growing sustainability needs of the industry, so experts will be available to discuss post-industrial or post-consumer recycled options to help with circular feed stream initiatives.


High-performance Recyclable Purging Concentrate:

Through the Asaclean Purging Compounds merger, APNA has created a streamlined process for purchasers to acquire pellets and purging compounds in one place. It improves the purchasing experience and increasing efficiency. For relevant user experience and a live demo space, the Asaclean brand will have a separate booth showcasing its PLUS Grade purging concentrate at the show. PLUS Grade is a high-performance, recyclable purging concentrate that addresses the solution of blending seamlessly with processors’ production resins.


State-of-the-Art SEBS Grades:

Tying in plastic technology diversity, the Asahi Kasei TPS Elastomer Division will display the latest advancements in state-of-the-art S.O.E. products within APNA’s booth. This group will introduce a new line that aims to offer unparalleled processability, abrasion resistance, enhanced damping properties, and improved adhesiveness by enhancing the features of S.O.E.


Source: Asahi Kasei



Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share: Jetting

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

At times, the flow front in injection molding appears to chart its own course, making unexpected decisions.For instance, one would anticipate that the shorter and thicker side would fill the flange before moving on to fill the main pipe walls in this example.

However, it's not uncommon to witness a counterintuitive scenario where a supposedly more challenging section fills faster, despite the expectation of higher pressure drop.

Physics dictates that there must be a rationale behind such occurrences.


Upon observing this phenomenon with RPVC, it became apparent that the significant extensional viscosity of the polymer played a crucial role. This viscosity demanded additional energy or pressure to navigate the 90° bend turn. Essentially, in situations where extensional viscosity is notable, it's easier for the flow to progress straight through a slightly narrower channel than to negotiate a sharp turn into a wider one.


Traditional flow analysis software often struggles with simulating this.


Moreover, similar unexpected filling patterns might be due or wrongly attributed to the inertia effect, known as "jetting". When these unexpected fill patterns are observed at low fill rate, inertia can almost immediately be ruled out.


So...it looks like jetting but it is NOT jetting !


It's imperative to delve into the underlying physics of the observed issues. Understanding the principles at play will lead you closer to effective solutions.- and help designing better parts and tools.


source:Vito leo

Monday, April 29, 2024

Coromandel to set up new phosphoric acid and sulphuric acid plants in Andhra Pradesh

With the new plants, the company’s capacity for phosphoric acid will increase by 750 tonnes per day, while that of sulphuric acid will go up by 1,800 tonnes per day.

Agrochemicals major Coromandel International announced that company’s Board of Directors has approved a proposal to set up new phosphoric acid and sulphuric acid plants at Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh with an investment of Rs 1,029 crore. The proposal was approved at the board meeting held on January 30, Coromandel International said in a stock exchange filing.


With the new plants, the company’s capacity for phosphoric acid will increase by 750 tonne per day, while that of sulphuric acid will go up by 1,800 tonne per day. Currently, the company has a capacity of 1,550 tonne per day for phosphoric acid and 4,200 tonne per day for sulphuric acid.

The funding for these ventures will be sourced through internal accruals and loans, with the primary objective of reducing the reliance on imports and transforming Kakinada into an integrated facility. However, the expansion of backward integration capabilities is contingent upon securing regulatory approvals.

Coromandel’s strategic investment aligns with its long-term goals of ensuring a stable supply of crucial raw materials for fertiliser production. The anticipated benefits include enhanced cost efficiencies, improved raw material security, and a contribution to the government’s vision of Atma Nirbhar Bharat.


source:agrospectrumindia/dtnext


Sunday, April 28, 2024

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : Nanostitches

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

“Nanostitches” enable lighter and tougher composite materials

In research that may lead to next-generation airplanes and spacecraft, MIT engineers used carbon nanotubes to prevent cracking in multilayered composites.


This schematic shows an engineered material with composite layers. Layers of carbon fibers (the long silver tubes) have microscopic forests of carbon nanotubes between them (the array of tiny brown objects). These tiny, densely packed fibers grip and hold the layers together, like ultrastrong Velcro, preventing the layers from peeling or shearing apart.


To save on fuel and reduce aircraft emissions, engineers are looking to build lighter, stronger airplanes out of advanced composites. These engineered materials are made from high-performance fibers that are embedded in polymer sheets. The sheets can be stacked and pressed into one multilayered material and made into extremely lightweight and durable structures.

But composite materials have one main vulnerability: the space between layers, which is typically filled with polymer “glue” to bond the layers together. In the event of an impact or strike, cracks can easily spread between layers and weaken the material, even though there may be no visible damage to the layers themselves. Over time, as these hidden cracks spread between layers, the composite could suddenly crumble without warning.


Now, MIT engineers have shown they can prevent cracks from spreading between composite’s layers, using an approach they developed called “nanostitching,” in which they deposit chemically grown microscopic forests of carbon nanotubes between composite layers. The tiny, densely packed fibers grip and hold the layers together, like ultrastrong Velcro, preventing the layers from peeling or shearing apart.


In experiments with an advanced composite known as thin-ply carbon fiber laminate, the team demonstrated that layers bonded with nanostitching improved the material’s resistance to cracks by up to 60 percent, compared with composites with conventional polymers. The researchers say the results help to address the main vulnerability in advanced composites.

“Just like phyllo dough flakes apart, composite layers can peel apart because this interlaminar region is the Achilles’ heel of composites,” says Brian Wardle, professor of aeronautics and astronautics at MIT. “We’re showing that nanostitching makes this normally weak region so strong and tough that a crack will not grow there. So, we could expect the next generation of aircraft to have composites held together with this nano-Velcro, to make aircraft safer and have greater longevity.”


Wardle and his colleagues have published their results today in the journal ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces. The study’s first author is former MIT visiting graduate student and postdoc Carolina Furtado, along with Reed Kopp, Xinchen Ni, Carlos Sarrado, Estelle Kalfon-Cohen, and Pedro Camanho.


Forest growth

At MIT, Wardle is director of the necstlab (pronounced “next lab”), where he and his group first developed the concept for nanostitching. The approach involves “growing” a forest of vertically aligned carbon nanotubes — hollow fibers of carbon, each so small that tens of billions of the the nanotubes can stand in an area smaller than a fingernail. To grow the nanotubes, the team used a process of chemical vapor deposition to react various catalysts in an oven, causing carbon to settle onto a surface as tiny, hair-like supports. The supports are eventually removed, leaving behind a densely packed forest of microscopic, vertical rolls of carbon.

The lab has previously shown that the nanotube forests can be grown and adhered to layers of composite material, and that this fiber-reinforced compound improves the material’s overall strength. The researchers had also seen some signs that the fibers can improve a composite’s resistance to cracks between layers.

In their new study, the engineers took a more in-depth look at the between-layer region in composites to test and quantify how nanostitching would improve the region’s resistance to cracks. In particular, the study focused on an advanced composite material known as thin-ply carbon fiber laminates.

“This is an emerging composite technology, where each layer, or ply, is about 50 microns thin, compared to standard composite plies that are 150 microns, which is about the diameter of a human hair. There’s evidence to suggest they are better than standard-thickness composites. And we wanted to see whether there might be synergy between our nanostitching and this thin-ply technology, since it could lead to more resilient aircraft, high-value aerospace structures, and space and military vehicles,” Wardle says.

Velcro grip

The study’s experiments were led by Carolina Furtado, who joined the effort as part of the MIT-Portugal program in 2016, continued the project as a postdoc, and is now a professor at the University of Porto in Portugal, where her research focuses on modeling cracks and damage in advanced composites.

In her tests, Furtado used the group’s techniques of chemical vapor deposition to grow densely packed forests of vertically aligned carbon nanotubes. She also fabricated samples of thin-ply carbon fiber laminates. The resulting advanced composite was about 3 millimeters thick and comprised 60 layers, each made from stiff, horizontal fibers embedded in a polymer sheet.

She transferred and adhered the nanotube forest in between the two middle layers of the composite, then cooked the material in an autoclave to cure. To test crack resistance, the researchers placed a crack on the edge of the composite, right at the start of the region between the two middle layers.

“In fracture testing, we always start with a crack because we want to test whether and how far the crack will spread,” Furtado explains.The researchers then placed samples of the nanotube-reinforced composite in an experimental setup to test their resilience to “delamination,” or the potential for layers to separate.

“There’s lots of ways you can get precursors to delamination, such as from impacts, like tool drop, bird strike, runway kickup in aircraft, and there could be almost no visible damage, but internally it has a delamination,” Wardle says. “Just like a human, if you’ve got a hairline fracture in a bone, it’s not good. Just because you can’t see it doesn’t mean it’s not impacting you. And damage in composites is hard to inspect.”

To examine nanostitching’s potential to prevent delamination, the team placed their samples in a setup to test three delamination modes, in which a crack could spread through the between-layer region and peel the layers apart or cause them to slide against each other, or do a combination of both. All three of these modes are the most common ways in which conventional composites can internally flake and crumble.

The tests, in which the researchers precisely measured the force required to peel or shear the composite’s layers, revealed that the nanostitched held fast, and the initial crack that the researchers made was unable to spread further between the layers. The nanostitched samples were up to 62 percent tougher and more resistant to cracks, compared with the same advanced composite material that was held together with conventional polymers.

“This is a new composite technology, turbocharged by our nanotubes,” Wardle says.

“The authors have demonsrated that thin plies and nanostitching together have made significant increase in toughness,” says Stephen Tsai, emeritus professor of aeronautics and astronautics at Stanford University. “Composites are degraded by their weak interlaminar strength. Any improvement shown in this work will increase the design allowable, and reduce the weight and cost of composites technology.”

The researchers envision that any vehicle or structure that incorporates conventional composites could be made lighter, tougher, and more resilient with nanostitching.

“You could have selective reinforcement of problematic areas, to reinforce holes or bolted joints, or places where delamination might happen,” Furtado says. “This opens a big window of opportunity.”

source: MIT News

Saturday, April 27, 2024

Presentation on TYPE 4 H2 CYLINDER MANUFACTURING PROJECT

It was an honor to share my experience on the TYPE 4 composite Cylinder manufacturing process during a workshop conducted at IIT Gandhinagar this week.

I have shared the real challenges that most of the manufacturers are facing in the world market today such as Permeation, Stress corrosion cracking and Batch testing.



My aim was to convey the practical difficulties and challenges while manufacturing polymeric liner and hybridization of fibers in the Hydrogen cylinder manufacturing process.

Also share current Hydrogen Economy and Future trends in fuels,additives, polymers and carbon fibers respectively in my session.The attendees were from well known companies and different states in India.Had the privilege to interact with each one of them and exchanged our views on the composites industry in India.


It was a memorable event and also FIRST OF ITS KIND OF a workshop on TYPE-4 COPV HYDROGEN CYLINDER MANUFACTURING event that was conducted openly in India.


I thank Dr.RK Singh from CECA ASIA and the IIT Gandhinagar team for conducting this event in a fantastic way.


REACH out to me to have such a real/Virtual presentation for your company/Board of Directors to understand this project in depth,that will save your money and time. I can cover all topics from project timeline,prototype testing,certification from notified bodies/domestic approval agency ,in-house production and testing facility, related to the TYPE 4 H2/CNG CYLINDER PROJECT on an affordable fee structure.


Thanks

Muthuramalingam Krishnan

Sunday, April 21, 2024

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share: Differential shrinkage driven warpage problem

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

How to experimentally spot a differential shrinkage driven warpage problem ?

If you are molding a relatively uniform thickness part and suffer from warpage, there is a nice trick to experimentally separate the contribution of differential shrinkage from other sources of problems (differential cooling, anisotropy).


Just make parts that are roughly full (say, 99% full), with zero packing (no pressure, no time). By not packing, you avoid packing one area better than another (for instance overpacking the gate area vs. distant areas). As a result you have a lighter part, with sink marks all over and voids, but with essentially NO DIFFERENTIAL SHRINKAGE. If this "short shot" is flatter than your packed part, you have experimentally demonstrated a strong contribution from "uneven packing", i.e. differential shrinkage.


source:Vito leo

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...