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Pore Performance: One 3D-printing firm's ambition to re-engineer membranes

Adam Duckett interviews Tom Pugh and Andrew Walker about Evove’s push to improve separations

Type: Feature

Our Research Focus: Déjà Vu

Humbul Suleman and Rizwan Nasir ask if VHS tapes can help to develop better membranes for CO2 removal?

Type: Feature

Challenger: Home for Christmas

Mark Yates examines the engineering behind Apollo, and highlights the continuing importance of science and R&D teams on the ground

Type: Feature

IChemE releases ChERD Centenary Special

In a centenary special issue of the journal Chemical Engineering Research and Design, experts offer their views on the future of separations, 3D-printing, CFD and much more besides.

Type: Feature

Question Time: Celebrate, Communicate, Inspire

As IChemE wraps up its Centenary year, Adam Duckett looks to the important contributions needed next

Type: Feature

Book Review: The Chemical Cocktail

Fiona Erskine; ISBN: 9780861540334; Point Blank, an imprint of Oneworld; 2022; £8.99

Type: Feature

US announces ‘major’ fusion breakthrough

RESEARCHERS at the US Department of Energy’s Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) have achieved a “major scientific breakthrough” that takes a step towards realising the clean and nearly unlimited fuel supply offered by fusion power.

Type: News

COP27: Three Things I Would Revisit for COP28

David Simmonds suggests three ways that could help next year's COP28 deliver real results

Type: Feature

UK coal mine approval: ‘I don’t understand why we’re doing this,’ says CCC Chair

THE UK Government has approved the first coal mine in 30 years, despite widespread climate concerns and an apparent lack of need.

Type: News

The Breakfast Club

Early innovations from the food and drinks industry have done much to influence other industries and sectors. Martin Pitt thinks about it over a breakfast of cereal with cold milk and sugar

Type: Feature

UK backs Sizewell C with £700m as it targets energy sovereignty

THE UK Government has announced the “historic” £700m (US$836.9m) backing of EDF’s Sizewell C nuclear power project, as part of a landmark package intended to help secure Britain’s energy independence and prevent reliance on volatile global markets.

Type: News

Solar farms in space demo could be ready by 2030

A PLAN to use satellites in Earth’s orbit to harvest the Sun’s energy from space and beam it down to Earth using microwaves could be up and running as early as 2030, with the first-of-a-kind operational system delivering power into the grid by 2040.

Type: News

Net zero transition 'world's most ambitious engineering project'

SWITCHING from fossil fuel to low-carbon energy in less than 30 years in order to achieve net zero is arguably the biggest engineering project ever undertaken by mankind, says the Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IMechE) in a new report.

Type: News

Speaking Out, Staying Well

Jon Walton reflects on the changes in approach to mental health and wellbeing across the engineering sector over the last 20 years, and how slowly, but surely, men are learning to speak out.

Type: Feature

Study investigates energy efficiencies to reduce emissions at Ineos Grangemouth

INEOS, co-funded by the Scottish Industrial Energy Transformation Fund (SIETF), will conduct a feasibility study to look at improving energy efficiencies and reducing emissions at its primary manufacturing asset at its Grangemouth site in Scotland – the KG ethylene plant.

Type: News

Plastics recycling partners plan 100,000 t/y facility

INEOS and Plastic Energy have signed a memorandum of understanding for a 100,000 t/y facility in Köln, Germany, to turn difficult-to-recycle plastic waste into virgin-quality raw materials. The plant will represent the largest use of Plastic Energy’s technology on the market.

Type: News

New online platform helps pinpoint GHG emission sources across the globe

HALF of the world’s 50 largest sources of greenhouse gas emissions across the world are oil and gas production fields and their associated facilities – the same industry which is also significantly underreporting its emissions, a new database by Climate TRACE shows.

Type: News

The RSC commits to 100% open access within five years

THE Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) has announced that it plans to make all of its fully RSC-owned journals open access within five years by seeking financial support from partners rather than making authors pay article processing charges (APCs).

Type: News

Steelmaker successfully trials e-coke that could reduce emissions by up to 30%

LIBERTY Steel UK, the nation’s third largest steel manufacturer, has successfully completed trials of e-coke, a new raw material that can replace anthracite in electrical steelmaking, reducing emissions by as much as 30%.

Type: News

Britishvolt secures short-term funding in wake of closure concerns

THE TROUBLED battery startup Britishvolt and its proposed UK gigafactory has been thrown a lifeline of funding for five weeks to save it from potential closure, following reports that the firm was heading into administration.

Type: News