Skip to main content

Home/ Eco20/20/ Group items tagged universal

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Energy Net

Canadian scientist creates atmosphere-saving CO2 scrubbing machine - Miscellaneous - 0 views

  • An ever-present point of concern for the planet’s future welfare, worries over damaging CO2 emissions could soon be a thing of the past thanks to a University of Calgary climate change scientist who’s developed a machine capable of removing CO2 from the air. More pointedly, David Keith and a team of researchers working out of the University of Calgary have been diligently looking for a way to capture harmful greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2) directly from the air by utilising “near-commercial” technology.
  •  
    An ever-present point of concern for the planet's future welfare, worries over damaging CO2 emissions could soon be a thing of the past thanks to a University of Calgary climate change scientist who's developed a machine capable of removing CO2 from the air. More pointedly, David Keith and a team of researchers working out of the University of Calgary have been diligently looking for a way to capture harmful greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2) directly from the air by utilising "near-commercial" technology.
shubhendu bhatnager

CCS University Results 2015 www.ccsuresults.com Chaudhary Charan Singh University BA, B... - 0 views

aghora group

Salem Colleges, Courses, Institutes, University, Degrees, Education options | Grid Listing - 0 views

  •  
    Browse colleges in Kerala, Bangalore, Coimbatore and much more. Know about Colleges, Courses, Institutes, University, Degrees, Education options in India. Find colleges and universities in India. Search Educrib.com Now!
Energy Net

Big LED Breakthrough at Purdue University Could Change the World : TreeHugger - 0 views

  •  
    The incandescent lightbulb that wastes 90% of the electricity as heat is dying, we all know that. But a new breakthrough in solid state lighting might also kill compact fluorescent lightbulbs (CFLs) faster than some expected. Scientists at Purdue University have figured out how to manufacture LED solid-state lights on regular metal-coated silicon wafers (more details below). What this means is: much lower costs.
deestiles

University of Idaho Showing the Rest of the Inland Northwest How it's Done - 0 views

  •  
    Let's take a trip down the Palouse to check in with the most progressive university in our region (come on local schools, that ought to light a fire). It seems like we're always talking about new and exciting environmental stories coming from our neighbors to the south, and today is no disappointment ...
man12345

Taliban Attacks Pak University again, continuing their crime to the innocent people - 0 views

  •  
    Quite a few shooters have reportedly attacked Bacha Khan University in northwest Pakistan, allegedly slaughtering up to 20 individuals and harming 50 others.
Energy Net

Peak Energy: The Ford Global Challenge - A Green Car That Runs On Air? - 0 views

  •  
    The challenge set by Ford Global Technologies is to design a Model-T for the 21st Century - an inexpensive, innovative and sustainable car. Deakin University is the only Australian university and one of only five worldwide invited to participate in the Challenge, part of the celebrations for the 100th anniversary of the fabled Model T; the car that changed the 20th Century. Deakin University's 'under wraps' design for the Ford Global Challenge left for Detroit on 29th August carried by Deakin's Tim de Souza (Chief Design Engineer) and Stuart Hanafin (Portfolio Coordinator). Deakin's project is code-named T2 ('TSquared').
eco20-20

Green Plug Introduces: A Universal Charger: Eco20/20 - 0 views

  •  
    All of the cell phones sold about three years from now will have a universal charger to the benefit of cell phone producers, owners, and the environment.
shubhendu bhatnager

UOK University of Kota Results 2015-2016 - 0 views

  •  
    UOK University of Kota B.Com, BBA, M.Phil, LLB I,II,III,IV Year Semester, BSc, Commerce Result 2015
Energy Net

Katrina And Rita Provide Glimpse Of What Could Happen To Offshore Drilling If Gustav Hi... - 0 views

  • Shortly after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita hit the U.S., Rice University civil and mechanical engineering professor Satish Nagarajaiah studied damage done to offshore drilling platforms in the Gulf of Mexico.
  •  
    Shortly after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita hit the U.S., Rice University civil and mechanical engineering professor Satish Nagarajaiah studied damage done to offshore drilling platforms in the Gulf of Mexico.
anonymous

Auburn University receive up to $4.9 Million for Biofuel Project - 0 views

  •  
    WASHINGTON (AP) - Auburn University has been selected to receive up to $4.9 million of federal grant money for a biofuel project.
Energy Net

Nanotechnology Now: "Nanoparticle breakthrough could improve solar cells" - 1 views

  •  
    Abstract: The sun may soon power many more homes and appliances, thanks to chemists at Idaho National Laboratory and Idaho State University. They have invented a way to manufacture highly precise, uniform nanoparticles to order. The technology, which won an R&D 100 Award this year, has the potential to vastly improve photovoltaic cells and further spur the growing nanotech revolution. Nanoparticle breakthrough could improve solar cells Idaho Falls, ID | Posted on October 29th, 2009 INL chemist Bob Fox and his ISU colleagues were looking for a better way to make semiconducting nanoparticles for solar cells. When the researchers introduced "supercritical" carbon dioxide - CO2 that behaves like both a gas and a liquid - to their reactions, they generated high-quality nanoparticles at low, energy-saving temperatures. And, surprisingly, the nanoparticles were incredibly uniform. With subsequent tweaking, the team figured out how to make nanoparticles of prescribed sizes - anywhere from 1 to 100 nanometers - with unprecedented precision. Because the properties of nanoparticles are so strongly size-dependent, the implications of this breakthrough are vast.
  •  
    Abstract: The sun may soon power many more homes and appliances, thanks to chemists at Idaho National Laboratory and Idaho State University. They have invented a way to manufacture highly precise, uniform nanoparticles to order. The technology, which won an R&D 100 Award this year, has the potential to vastly improve photovoltaic cells and further spur the growing nanotech revolution. Nanoparticle breakthrough could improve solar cells Idaho Falls, ID | Posted on October 29th, 2009 INL chemist Bob Fox and his ISU colleagues were looking for a better way to make semiconducting nanoparticles for solar cells. When the researchers introduced "supercritical" carbon dioxide - CO2 that behaves like both a gas and a liquid - to their reactions, they generated high-quality nanoparticles at low, energy-saving temperatures. And, surprisingly, the nanoparticles were incredibly uniform. With subsequent tweaking, the team figured out how to make nanoparticles of prescribed sizes - anywhere from 1 to 100 nanometers - with unprecedented precision. Because the properties of nanoparticles are so strongly size-dependent, the implications of this breakthrough are vast.
owen11158

cheap ralph lauren bags When asked to choose - 0 views

Global emissions must reduce by more than 5 per cent each year over several decades to keep climate change below 2°C.* This emission quota implies that over half of proven fossil reserves might hav...

started by owen11158 on 14 Nov 14 no follow-up yet
ava777

Universal Wall Quick Charger - 0 views

Max Power: EU Plug / UK Plug / US Plug 30W Input: AC100-240V,50-60Hz,500mA Feature 1: For Samsung Galaxy S9 S8 Note 9 Note 8 S7 S6 Edge Charger Feature 2: For Xiaomi mi8 mi6 Redmi 5A Huawei Lenovo ...

started by ava777 on 21 May 19 no follow-up yet
Energy Net

A Promising Catalyst for Solar-Based Hydrogen Energy Production - 0 views

  •  
    Scientists have found that a polymer material is an excellent catalyst in a process to produce hydrogen fuel using sunlight and water. The material meets the basic requirements for an ideal catalyst -- including being abundant, easy to work with, and non-toxic -- and could help this "green" alternative-energy production method become mainstream. Creating hydrogen gas by splitting water (H2O) molecules with solar energy is a promising way of generating hydrogen fuel, which, by either being burned directly or used in fuel cells, can power many types of vehicles, including automobiles, buses, and even airplanes. The study's corresponding scientist is Xinchen Wang, a chemist affiliated with the Max-Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces in Potsdam, Germany, and Fouzhou University in Fouzhou, China.
Energy Net

Rainforest Fungus Naturally Synthesizes Diesel | Wired Science from Wired.com - 0 views

  •  
    A fungus that lives inside trees in the Patagonian rain forest naturally makes a mix of hydrocarbons that bears a striking resemblance to diesel, biologists announced today. And the fungus can grow on cellulose, a major component of tree trunks, blades of grass and stalks that is the most abundant carbon-based plant material on Earth. "When we looked at the gas analysis, I was flabbergasted," said Gary Strobel, a plant scientist at Montana State University, and the lead author of a paper in Microbiology describing the find. "We were looking at the essence of diesel fuel."
Energy Net

Powered by olive stones? Turning waste stones into fuel - 0 views

  •  
    Olive stones can be turned into bioethanol, a renewable fuel that can be produced from plant matter and used as an alternative to petrol or diesel. This gives the olive processing industry an opportunity to make valuable use of 4 million tonnes of waste in olive stones it generates every year and sets a precedent for the recycling of waste products as fuels. Researchers from the Universities of Jaén and Granada in Spain show how this can be achieved in a study published in the latest edition of the Society of Chemical Industry's (SCI) Journal of Chemical Technology & Biotechnology.
Energy Net

San Francisco to Detroit: Go electric - Green Wombat - 0 views

  •  
    It was a day when the shift from the past to the future was almost palpable. It started Thursday morning in Berkeley where Green Wombat was moderating a panel of tech luminaries gathered at the University of California's Global Technology Leaders Conference. As Shai Agassi, founder of electric car infrastructure company Better Place, makes the case for harnessing Silicon Valley's technological innovation to Detroit's manufacturing might to create a sustainable car industry, dispatches from the automotive apocalypse roll down my BlackBerry: Ford (F) shares sink to $1.01…GM's (GM) stock falls to its lowest level since World War II…U.S. automakers beg for a bailout…California Congressman Henry Waxman ousts Michigan's John Dingell - the Duke of Detroit - from his 28-year chairmanship of the powerful House Energy and Commerce Committee. Agassi slips out of the conference and an hour later I catch up with him across the Bay at San Francisco City Hall where he and representatives of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and the mayors of San Francisco, San Jose and Oakland announce a $1 billion project to build a regional network of electric car charging stations. Better Place has signed similar deals with governments in Israel, Denmark and Australia, but California is the company's first foray into the U.S. market. Planning for the Bay Area network begins in 2009 with construction scheduled to start in 2010 and commercial rollout set for 2012.
1 - 20 of 364 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page