Oxford Instruments Manufactures Sophisiticated R& D and production equipment that innovators are using for cutting edge cleantech and renewable energy product developemnt,among other things. Here is the announccement for a recent contract they one. -Editor Oxford Instruments Plasma Technology (OIPT) has just received a 3 system order from the prestigious new Melbourne Centre for Nanofabrication (MCN) in Australia. The systems, two Plasmalab® System100 ICP380 tools and a Plasmalab System100 PECVD system, have been bought as part of the Centre’s programme to equip their cleanrooms with state of the art instrumentation for nano and micro scale fabrication. Oxford Instruments has a reputation for working with and equipping many renowned universities and research institutes throughout Europe and USA. That fact and the flexibility of OIPT’s tools were important criteria in MCN’s decision to choose OIPT as a strategic partner. The MCN is the Victorian node ...
BRISTOL TOWNSHIP – Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection Secretary John Hanger today toured The Bridge Business Center in Bristol Township, Bucks County, where $1 million in federal recovery funds are being used to install a modern energy system in a former Rohm & Haas laboratory. Secretary Hanger witnessed a milestone in the project’s development, as seven micro-turbines were lifted by crane and placed on the roof of a building at 360 George Patterson Blvd., where renovations are underway in the 50,000-square-foot, multi-tenant facility. “This is how recovery funds are making a real difference in people’s lives,” said Hanger. “In a community that has suffered from an economic downturn, we see this developer making not only a $4.5 million investment in adaptive reuse of a building on a designated brownfield site, but also in providing a clean, affordable and reliable source of energy for its tenants.” In March, Governor Edward G. Rendell announced the $1 million Penns...
June 26, 2009 Carbonized chicken feather fibers are the cheapest way to store hydrogen. Using chicken feathers is similar to using animal manure and crop waste. All three are waste products that can be used to create something new whether it is hydrogen storage, or biofuel. All three are renewable resources. University of Delaware researchers are the ones who have developed chicken feather fiber hydrogen storage. Richard P. Wool, professor of chemical engineering and director of the University’s Affordable Composites from Renewable Resources (ACRES) program had this to say, “Carbonized chicken feather fibers have the potential to dramatically improve upon existing methods of hydrogen storage and perhaps pave the way for the practical development of a truly hydrogen-based energy economy.” Chicken feather fibers (CFF) are made up of hollow tubes composed of keratin. Heated the keratin creates cross links that make the CFFs stronger. Heating also causes the CFFs to become more po...
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