Emerson Process Management is in the process of expanding its energy management portfolio through new services and technologies that go on to help municipalities and companies in converting low cost wastes as well as biomass into renewable energies more reliably and efficiently through lower carbon emissions.
Purdue University chemical engineers have developed a new method for the processing of biomass and agricultural wastes into biofuels. They are also working on creating proposed mobile processing plants for the purpose of roving around Midwest for fuel production.
Xebec Adsorption Inc. is likely to deliver a biogas upgrading facility to WELtec BioPower GmbH for a new biogas project in Wuxi, China.
A surprising MIT laboratory finding about the behavior of a thin sheet of material — less than a thousandth of the thickness of a human hair — could lead to improved ways of studying the behavior of electrodes and perhaps ultimately to improvements in the rate of power production from one type of fuel cell, according to a report published this week.
Research and Markets has announced the addition of another report, “On Solar Hydrogen and Nanotechnology”. Energy from the sun that strikes the Earth in one hour is more than the entire energy consumed by humans in one entire year.
Up till now, gas was utilized for generating electricity. Currently, entrepreneurs and researchers of a German-Austrian cooperation want to store additional electricity including solar power and wind as methane and store the same in presently existing gas storage plants.
The future of clean green solar power may well hinge on scientists being able to unravel the mysteries of photosynthesis, the process by which green plants convert sunlight into electrochemical energy.
Long hampered by high manufacturing costs and durability issues, fuel cell technology could overcome those obstacles and take a significant step towards mainstream adoption thanks to a finding by a Texas A+M University chemical engineering professor.
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) by means of its Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy has funded $2.5 million for two projects of the Pennsylvania State University.
LanzaTech develops technologies to produce ethanol from carbon monoxide that is present in the low hydrogen waste gases. The technology developed by the company enables to use these gases for production of fuels and chemicals using the fermentation process.
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