Showing 1-10 of 2,721 items.
NameSectorAbstractTitleProgrammeStart DateStop DateEC Contribution
CONSTGLASS

Environment

Since about 1950 various materials have been propagated for the conservation of stained glass, including epoxy resins, acrylates and polyurethanes. For all conservation materials on stained glass there is a...
Since about 1950 various materials have been propagated for the conservation of stained glass, including epoxy resins, acrylates and polyurethanes. For all conservation materials on stained glass there is a substantial lack of assessment of treatments after decades of natural weathering. Since most of the applied materials cause problems nowadays, the introduction of innovative and promissing new preservation strategies and materials are necessary. The aim of this project is to secure the conservation of stained glass windows as an important part of our European cultural heritage. Therefore, the proposal has been conceived with the following objectives: - to evaluate a representative variation of conservation materials on selected original objects after natural weathering; - to optimise and apply advanced non-destructive analytical methods and molecular biological tools for understanding long-term effects of conservation treatments and biodeterioration; - to investigate the degree of reversibility of ancient materials; - to propose remediation strategies based on treatments and re-treatability tests with modern materials and to improve preservation strategies by indroducing innovative conservation materials based on nano-porous glass phases, derived from colloidal silica sols and stabilised by glass fibre components (glass-in-glass consolidants). The pilot objects have been chosen in five different European countries, providing different restoration history and including both, medieval windows as well as objects from the 19th/20th century. Apart from classical analytical methods (optical microscopy, IR, SEM) advanced non-destructive methods (confocal micro-Raman spectroscopy, microfocus and phase contrast X-ray tomography, mCT) and biochemical methods will be applied. The project team consist of eleven partners from seven countries, including research institutes, universities, public authorities and SMEs.
Conservation materials for stained glass windows - assessment of treatments, studies on reversibility, and performance of innovative restoration strategies and productsFP620072010€741,900.00
ANVOC

Environment

The abatement of the environmental problems is one of the biggest challenges of technology today. This requires investment in new and clean processes. The development and implementation of new production...
The abatement of the environmental problems is one of the biggest challenges of technology today. This requires investment in new and clean processes. The development and implementation of new production and separation processes may result in a green industrial revolution. Nanotechnology and membrane technology has many opportunities in this respect. Membrane systems offer lower costs, less maintenance, more flexibility, and significant environmental and product quality advantages than the conventional technologies and can be applied to a wide variety of industries. While membrane systems can perform difficult separations not possible with other technologies, nanotechnology gives new opportunities for cleaner production. Since the use of nanotechnologies and membrane technologies in industry is new, the end-users, located in the Associate Candidate Countries (ACC), have not yet compiled and homogenized information. There is a great need within the end users in the ACCs to be informed about the application areas, the type of applications, and organic compound separation, recovery and reduce. This will be achieved by means of a symposium and dissemination of results obtained so far. The symposium will lead to integrate the knowledge of excellent experts in this field. The aim of the project is to unify and coordinate the efforts of the scientists working in the Application of Nanotechnologies for Separation and Recovery of Volatile Organic Compounds from Waste Air Streams. These are planning to be performed via symposium activities. During these activites effect of integration of the knowledge of excellent experts in nanotechnologies, membrane technologies and air pollution prevention in the field discussed is planning to be accomplished. In practice this will be an attempt for effective cooperation of academic and scientific researcher from one side with industrial, national and local administration, from another side.
Application of Nanotechnologies for Separation and Recovery of Volatile Organic Compounds from Waste Air StreamsFP620042005€50,000.00
NANOFIRE

Environment

Flammability is a major limiting factor for the expansion of polymer materials. The potential contribution of polymer materials to development of technologies with reduced environmental impact, may thus be missed....
Flammability is a major limiting factor for the expansion of polymer materials. The potential contribution of polymer materials to development of technologies with reduced environmental impact, may thus be missed. Fire retardant approaches developed in the past can no longer be used owing to undesirable side effects during fire retardance action and hindrance to end of life recycling technologies. Worldwide research in this area has not yet provided a suitable solution in terms of simultaneous fire risk and fire hazard reduction. However, new classes of nanocomposite materials and inorganic-organic hybrids can be rendered inherently fire retardant if their decomposition behavior is catalytically directed towards ceramisation and charring with creation of a surface protection to the polymer material. Particularly interesting in this approach are polyhedralsilsesquioxanes (POSS), carbon nanotubes (CNTs), and needle-like silicates with which the project deals. The success in implementing the ceramisatìon-charring mechanism, requires a combination of expertise encompassing deep knowledge in polymer chemistry and engineering, polymer thermal degradation and combustion, inorganic and physical chemistry and catalysis that could assist in performing a great breakthrough in an area that is of vital importance to our technological development. The partners of the Consortium proposing the project cover all these areas at a highly qualified level which is necessary to produce the substantial progress in basic knowledge on the fiammability of polymer nanocomposites and hybrids required to create an environmentally friendly highly performing new approach in fire retardance. Beside fire retardance, the inorganic nanophases are suitable carriers for distributing functional molecules in the polymer matrix that can lead to multifunctional materials with a whole range of applications such as transport, electrical and electronic sector, building, furniture, clothing, etc.
Environmentally friendly multifunctional fire retardant polymer hybrids and nanocompositesFP620042007€2,290,000.00
FUNFLUOS

Environment

The proposed work targets a specific branch of material science, solid metal fluorides with functionalised surfaces. It is both fundamental and applied in nature and comprises innovative synthesis, highly sophisticated...
The proposed work targets a specific branch of material science, solid metal fluorides with functionalised surfaces. It is both fundamental and applied in nature and comprises innovative synthesis, highly sophisticated characterisation, simulation/modelling and applications. The objective is to explore the upper limits of surface area, porosity, acidity and thermal stability achievable for these materials. Highly innovative synthetic approaches, including a recently developed non-aqueous route to very high surface area aluminium(lll) fluoride, will be used to obtain fluorides and fluorinated oxides of different metals, having characteristics far exceeding those exhibited by currently known forms. Specific synthetic goals are to obtain solid fluorides with surface areas ten times higher than presently known and with extremely high Lewis acidity; particular attention will be given to aluminium-containing materials. Synthesis will be combined with broad physicochemical characterisation, including highly advanced in situ methodologies supported by predictive simulation/modelling techniques, all geared to understand the underlying processes at molecular- and nano-levels. As a result, processes to control, tailor and modify target characteristics of the relevant materials for specific applications will be established. Mid-term innovation activities will be performed by the SME on two reactions of current technological importance. Replacement of widely used homogeneous Lewis acids, such as antimony(V) fluoride, by environmentally more acceptable, newly developed solid acids is a longer term technological goal, having high economic and environmental impacts. The use of fluoride materials in areas not directly connected with fluorine chemistry, for example in industrial acid catalysed processes employing Friedel-Crafts alkylation and acylation, is the third possible application.
Functionalised metal fluoridesFP620042008€2,399,900.00
AQUACOLL

Environment

The training programme, deals with the scientific area of colloids and particles in the natural aquatic environment,particularly freshwaters such as rivers and groundwaters. It will train 15 early stage researches...
The training programme, deals with the scientific area of colloids and particles in the natural aquatic environment,particularly freshwaters such as rivers and groundwaters. It will train 15 early stage researches in thequantitative understanding of this area of environmental chemistry and biology. In particular training will be inthe understanding of colloid influence on pollutant fate and behaviour. This area is of great importance andrelevance to the future of environmental sciences and will play a significant role in promoting future research inthe field of sustainable development and to lesser extent in areas such as Nanotechnology. The early stagefellows will also be trained (and assessed) in more generic skills (e.g. Researche Project Management, ObtainingResearch Funding etc), communicating with society and transferable skills (e.g oral and written communication,ethics, health and safety etc.). The training programme wille have a Scientist in Charge (Dr Lead), immediatelysupported by a research team (4 staff members), supervisory boards (20 further staff, with overlap) and trainingcourse leaders (approximately 20 additional staff). In addition, much support will come from the technical staff,other early stage researchers and other departments from the University. In particular, Staff development Unit,Information Services and Press Office. The Host is fully capable of meeting the training needs of the Fellows.Early stage researchers will be a mixture of PhD students registered at Birmingham University and fellows attending from other European research institutes. The early stage researchers registered for PhDs will beexpected to actively collaborate with a substantial number of other research groups, enhancing their mobility and training. A large number of collaborations with university and SME research groups have been fostered withinthis proposal. Further collaborations will also be developed during the proposal lifetime.
Colloids in the natural aquatic environment : impacts on pathogens and pollutant fate and behaviourFP620042008€873,362.44
PERSONA

Environment

PERSONA aims at advancing the paradigm of Ambient Intelligence through the harmonisation of Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) technologies and concepts for the development of sustainable and affordable solutions for the...
PERSONA aims at advancing the paradigm of Ambient Intelligence through the harmonisation of Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) technologies and concepts for the development of sustainable and affordable solutions for the social inclusion and independent living of Senior Citizen, integrated in a common semantic framework. It will develop a scalable open standard technological platform to build a broad range of AAL Services, to demonstrate and test the concept in real life implementations, assessing their social impact and establishing the initial business strategy for future deployment of the proposed technologies and services. The main challenges of PERSONA are: - To find solutions and develop AAL Services for social inclusion, for support in daily life activities, for early risk detection , for personal protection from health and environmental risks, for support in mobility and displacements - To develop a technological platform that allows the seamless and natural access to those services indicated above,. - To create a psychologically pleasant and easy- to- use integrated solutions - To demonstrate that the solutions found are affordable and sustainable for all the actors and stakeholders involved: elderly citizens living, welfare systems, service providers in the AAL market. The PERSONA technical platform will exploit and incorporate a broad range of relevant technologies which are developed and integrated in the project: AAL system reference architecture, micro- and nano-electronics, embedded systems, Human Machine Interfaces , Communication , software, web and network technologies, biosensors, embedded and distributed sensors, energy generation and control technologies, and intelligent software to tools for decision support. An important measure of success for the project will come from the outcome of the evaluation and validation in extensive test-beds and trials in three sites in Spain, Italy, and Denmark .
PERceptive Spaces prOmoting iNdependent AgingFP620062010€5,824,698.89
INDISPUTABLE KEY

Environment

In several industrial processes a misuse of resources prevails that drastically could be reduced introducing smart ICT-tools allowing real-time traceability solutions. One rather spectacular application concerns the forestry-wood production chain...
In several industrial processes a misuse of resources prevails that drastically could be reduced introducing smart ICT-tools allowing real-time traceability solutions. One rather spectacular application concerns the forestry-wood production chain where proper raw material for specific final products is an unsolved problem due to the complexity of biological raw-material in industrial processes. The magnitude of the problem, based on estimation of the total production of sawn wood in Europe 2002, is 25 million m3 equivalents to 5 billion euro. The Indisputable Key aims at developing methodology, technology, and knowledge to enable a significant increase in the utilisation of production resources in the forestry-wood production chain and to decrease the environmental impact. The developed systems will be based on the Individual Associated Data (IAD) concept, which facilitates automatic tracking of data along the forest-wood chain. Parameters involved, e.g. breast height diameter class, log number in the stem and cutting date strongly influences final wood product quality. Making information available at different stages along the forestry-wood chain requires automatic traceability systems, starting with logs in the forest. Communication between systems requires advanced information technology involving RFID-transponders and cellular phones adapted to industrial use by increased functionality. Frontline mechatronics, software, nano mechanics and electronics RandD partners will develop these systems. Verifying the function and environmental effects of the Indisputable Key systems will be implemented in different nodes of the forest-wood production chain by high-tech developers and evaluated by world-leading industry groups and fore-runner SMEs at hardwood and softwood forest industries in France, Norway, Finland and Sweden.
Intelligent distributed process utilisation and blazing environmental keyFP620062010€5,153,121.75
QUORUM

Environment

Fungi have proved to be a source of bioactive natural products and industrially important target products such as (i). Enzymes, (ii). Bioplastics, (iii). Bio-dyes, (iv). Vitamins, (v)? The overall aim...
Fungi have proved to be a source of bioactive natural products and industrially important target products such as (i). Enzymes, (ii). Bioplastics, (iii). Bio-dyes, (iv). Vitamins, (v)? The overall aim of this proposal is to use nanotechnology using natural molecules involved in fungal cell communications and mini-scale process parameters, to maintain and improve productivity for the white biotech industry of the commercially important bioproduct, and particularly laccases. The specific objectives of this proposal are: Using a Quorum Sensing approach at nano-scale for better understanding of biosynthesis of the industrially important target products; Quorum sensing and signal transduction in relation to fungal physiology and morphology in agitated systems; Comparative analyses of fungal cell communication in small and large scale submerged fermentations; The relevance and interrelation of traditional scale-up factors to quorum sensing in fungal cultures. The QUORUM project is based on a multidisciplinary approach, and builds a dynamic relation between 8 partners (1 SME and 7 Universities and Research Centres) from 7 countries. The QUORUM project will enhance competitiveness and sustainability of European industries by the development of leading-edge advances in environmentally respectful, energy efficiency, resource efficient processes and product technology. Two main technology innovation areas are concerned: enzymes and fine chemical productions. The QUORUM project will lead to a positive impact on economy through new/increased added value products, a beneficial impact on environmental issues, and new production models ?based on knowledge? to replace ?trial error? will be proposed to the industrial biotechnology sector in the value chain. The QUORUM project will support the ?Action Plan for environmental technology? (COM 131-2003) as well as the ?Life sciences and biotechnology: a strategy for Europe? (COM 27-2002).
Discovering Quorum Sensing in industrially useful Fungi, a novel approach at molecular level for scaling-up in white biotech.FP620062009€1,999,920.00
MEMBAQ

Environment

In all living cells, channels transporting water - aquaporins - exist. They are proteins, which only transport pure H2O molecules. They have a unique selectivity and are extremely efficient being...
In all living cells, channels transporting water - aquaporins - exist. They are proteins, which only transport pure H2O molecules. They have a unique selectivity and are extremely efficient being nature's own membrane systems. The purpose is to investigate whether these unique features can be industrially exploited: Recombinant aquaporin molecules will be embedded into water filtration membranes. Nano-biotechnological research of water transport in various organisms show that aquaporins have 100% selectivity: Only water molecules pass. They also maintain high water permeation rates. Membrane technology is another rapidly developing technology within filtration and separation. Substantial research is done to enhance efficiency of membranes. The MEMBAQ project combines these two research spearheads. This combination has never been done before. A new filtration membrane with aquaporins is in theory up to 50 times more efficient (energy input reduction). It is truly radical innovation of the water industries, for instance for water purification (billions of EUR is spent every year), salinity gradient energy production (exploitable potential is 2000 TWh annually), waste water reclamation (water re-use). The MEMBAQ project will 1) produce recombinant aquaporin, 2) design nanotechnological membrane by means of computer simulation, 3) incorporate aquaporins into stable membranes, 4) engineer membranes based on characterising towards pressure, ph etc., 5) and finally test such membranes in three applications: Water purification, osmotic energy, and waste water reclamation for re-use. US and Japan invest significantly more per capita than EU in nanotechnology. This gap is expected to widen in the next few years. In MEMBAQ, we use real market needs in the water sector as a driver for accelerated research and innovation in nanotechnology. Enormous potentials in filtering other fluids and gasses with natural proteins embedded in membranes exist.
Incorporation of Aquaporins in Membranes for Industrial ApplicationsFP620062010€2,100,000.00
MESOCAT

Environment

This proposal is for an IIF award to enable a researcher from India to visit a laboratory in the UK and develop: (i) new scientific skills; (ii) a lasting collaboration...
This proposal is for an IIF award to enable a researcher from India to visit a laboratory in the UK and develop: (i) new scientific skills; (ii) a lasting collaboration within the UK; and (iii) potential to increase the research capacity of his home research environment.The science of the proposal aims at understanding chemical mechanisms and catalyst design factors that influence degradation of selected pesticides by particle photocatalysts in aqueous solution. This understanding will be used to design & synthesise more efficient TiO2 photocatalysts for the destruction of priority organic pollutants.The latter will be achieved using nanoparticle production technologies to synthesize surface & composition modified catalysts. For modification of composition, we propose to produce innovative P25 analogues - in particular, to control the rutile crystallite size, anatase porocity and anatase/rutile ratio and to optimize the reactivity of the catalyst with respect to those parameters. For modification of the surface, we propose to conduct a novel study of the efficiencies of photodegradation of hydro-phobic/philic pesticides on samples of TiO2 that have been pretreated to render their surfaces highly hydrophilic & highly hydrophobic, so allowing assessment of the respective efficiencies of dynamic & static photodegradation mechanisms for each class of pollutant. We also propose to use the Quartz Crystal Microbalance to measure substrate adsorption at the catalyst surface in real time and most especially during a photodegradation experiment.The intermediates & mechanism through which the pesticides of interests are destroyed by these modified photocatalysts will also be investigated. Experiments will be conducted to map the A->B->C etc degradation route of each pollutant and to study how competition effects influence this process. To prevent adverse environmental impact, toxicity of photodegradation intermediates will be assessed and compared with the parent molecule.
Mesoporous Photocatalysts for the Degradation of Persistent Organic PollutantsFP620062009€229,327.32