most popular: Bike Tree Protects Bikes


most popular: Bears Swarm Playground


most popular: Help Protect Great Tits

th comments
blake said: "One of the main issues I found with NAU was their inability to ship out of the USA. Being in Canada and someone who has no issue dropping $110 for ..." [read]

Dipper said: "More support for the regulatory people. Those packing materials are expensive. The can could have been used for this size as well as larger bottl..." [read]

ron said: ""I would indeed suggest that the leather was primarily selected, not for style, but rather for function. " i'm not one to not admit when yo..." [read]

buzz saw said: "Scumbags and liars all...." [read]

Blake said: "Hey guys, you forget that hazardous substance shipments are regulated by the DOT and other bodies ( Dot's 49-CF regs specifically if it's in or thr..." [read]

Could Nanoengineering Create Lower Emissions from Cement Production?

by Jeff McIntire-Strasburg, St. Louis, MO on 02. 6.07
Science & Technology (science)

nanoengineers.JPGIn Heat: How to Stop the Planet from Burning, British environmental activist and writer George Monbiot identifies cement production as major source of greenhouse gas emissions. While most people are focused on reducing emissions from cars and buildings, a group of MIT engineers is attempting to tackle the cement issue by studying the material's nanoparticle structure. Lead project engineer Franz-Josef Ulm, the Esther and Harold E. Edgerton Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and his team believe that they can re-engineer cement so that production requires much less heat, and, by extension, emits less CO2:

"If everything depends on the organizational structure of the nanoparticles that make up concrete, rather than on the material itself, we can conceivably replace it with a material that has concrete's other characteristics-strength, durability, mass availability and low cost-but does not release so much CO2 into the atmosphere during manufacture," said [Ulm]. ...

The work also shows that the study of very common materials at the nano scale has great potential for improving materials in ways we might not have conceived. Ulm refers to this work as the "identification of the geogenomic code of materials, the blueprint of a material's nanomechanical behavior."

Cement is manufactured at the rate of 2.35 billion tons per year, enough to produce 1 cubic meter of concrete for every person in the world. If engineers can reduce carbon dioxide emissions in the world's cement manufacturing by even 10 percent, that would accomplish one-fifth of the Kyoto Protocol goal of a 5.2 percent reduction in total carbon dioxide emissions.

Studying the nanoparticles of a wide variety of cement pastes, Ulm and colleagues discovered that materials' hardness resulted not from a particular combination of minerals, but rather "...the organization of that mineral as packed nanoparticles." Theoretically, the team could find or engineer a material that has the same packed nanoparticle structure, but doesn't require the high heat levels for production. The potential payoff: a 10% worldwide reduction in CO2 emissions.Ulm estimates that the project will take about five years. ::Science Daily via jiltedcitizen at Hugg

Photo Credit: Donna Coveney

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

th ads
th top picks
th ads