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INWED: Female chemical engineers recognised for green leadership

AS celebrations get underway for International Women in Engineering Day (INWED), we caught up with the six chemical engineers who today were announced as winners of the Top 50 Women in Engineering, for their work on sustainability.

Type: Feature

Monash team enlists AI to rapidly identify microplastics in step towards real-time environmental analysis

ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE could one day help us clean up microplastics after researchers at Monash University showed AI can help with rapid identification. The system could eventually sweep the oceans and carry out real-time wastewater analysis.

Type: News

Modelling with Excel Part 8: A Comparative Study ‑ Part 2

Stephen Hall offers practical guidance on using Excel for project engineering

Type: Feature

Researchers inject vegetables with melatonin using microneedles to extend shelf life

RESEARCHERS from the US and Singapore have developed a method to extend the shelf life of vegetables by injecting them with biodegradable microneedles containing the hormone melatonin.

Type: News

Bayer boosts Germany’s coronavirus testing capacity

LIFE science company Bayer has boosted Germany’s coronavirus analysis capacity by several thousand tests per day. The company is providing more than 40 pieces of equipment from its research operations, which are used for the isolation and amplification of viral RNA, and is making its personnel available to help.

Type: News

Electric avenue: researchers use electric fields to catalyse chemical reactions

WHAT if you could one day catalyse your industrial reactions with electric fields rather than the chemical catalysts commonly used today? It might be closer than you think after chemists at Kings College London successfully demonstrated the technique inside a microfluidic reactor.

Type: News

Bio-compatible ion current battery created

ENGINEERS in the US have developed a new form of battery which works on the basis of flowing ions, rather than flowing electrons, the same kind of electrical energy used by living organisms.

Type: News

Queensland government invests A$24m in flow batteries to boost battery network

THE QUEENSLAND government is investing A$24m (US$15.4m) into iron and zinc flow batteries from local manufacturers to support the next stage of the state’s local battery capabilities, and to help meet its renewable energy commitments.

Type: News

Wood extends Shell contract to include work on new North Sea oil vessel

ENGINEERING firm Wood has signed a two-year extension to its contract with Shell for work on the oil giant’s newest floating vessel in the North Sea.

Type: News

Wood gets contract for green ammonia facility

WOOD has announced that it will provide conceptual engineering for a large-scale green hydrogen production facility in Chile, where the hydrogen will be used to produce ammonia.

Type: News

The importance of engineers and not strangling AI

SIR PATRICK VALLANCE reflects on five years as the UK’s chief scientific advisor.

Type: News

LIVE Reporting from IChemE's Hazards34 Process Safety Conference

The final day of Hazards34 is now closed. You can read our full coverage below including our audio interviews with delegates and the key insights that safety experts have been sharing over the last three days.

Type: News

TCE Frank Morton 2025 live blog

Welcome to the The Chemical Engineer magazine's live blog for the Frank Morton sports day 2025, hosted by last year's winners, The University of Nottingham. Edited by Aniqah Majid and Sam Baker

Type: News

Pure and Simple

Miguel Johansson Finguerut describes his work on community water projects in central Mexico

Type: Feature

INWED 2025: Rebuilding Industry with Waste

To mark International Women in Engineering Day, Sam Baker speaks with Krisztina Kovacs-Schreiner about her startup, which transforms waste wood into green building blocks – while also challenging outdated ideas about engineering, equity, and the future of manufacturing

Type: Feature

Chemistry Australia's gas price warning

CHEMISTRY Australia has said that manufacturing and jobs are still being affected by rising gas prices, despite government action.

Type: News

IChemE awards engineers for their work on process safety

SEVEN chemical engineers have been awarded medals for their outstanding contributions to process safety.

Type: News

IChemE sets out priority topics to 2024

ICHEME has identified three priority topics and published Learned Society Priority Topics to 2024, which sets out how the Institution will address these focus areas over the coming years.

Type: News

British Airways to use UK-made SAF

PHILLIPS 66 will supply sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) to British Airways (BA), under a new supply agreement, which the companies say will make the airline the first to use SAF produced on a commercial scale in the UK.

Type: News

Safety in Numbers

THE field of process safety is constantly evolving. This goes right from the early 1800s – when Éleuthère Irénée du Pont recognised the importance of leadership commitment and had his managers and their families live at the gunpowder factory, thus ensuring they had a focus on safety – to modern-day technological developments in the design of instrumented protective systems.

Type: Feature

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