
LafargeHolcim
LafargeHolcim
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2025Partners:Yale University, University of Cambridge, LafargeHolcim (United Kingdom), High Speed Two HS2 Ltd, Mace +103 partnersYale University,University of Cambridge,LafargeHolcim (United Kingdom),High Speed Two HS2 Ltd,Mace,COSTAIN LTD,TUW,University of Surrey,Network Rail,Brunel University,LafargeHolcim Group (UK) (Aggregate Ind),Specwall-Alliance Ltd,Arup Group Ltd,British Glass,Building Research Establishment,Construction Industry Research and Information Association,University of Surrey,Hoskins Circular,High Speed Two HS2 Limited,UCL,Expedition Engineering Ltd,University of Cambridge,Shire Mineral & Machinery Suppliers,British Glass,Bywaters,Costain (United Kingdom),Story Contracting Ltd,Highways Agency,Brick Development Association,BuroHappold (United Kingdom),UK Quality Ash Association,UK Quality Ash Association,Construction Products Association,Granta Design (United Kingdom),HLM Architects,Northumberland County Council,Brick Development Association (The),Construction Products Association,EA,Arup Group,OFFICE FOR NATIONAL STATISTICS,Aggregate Industries,Office for National Statistics,AECOM,CIH,FORTIS IBA,British Glass,BURO HAPPOLD LIMITED,Aecom (United Kingdom),Vienna University of Technology,British Standards Institution,Etex Building Performance Limited,NFDC (Nat Fed Demolition Contractors),TU Wien,University Federico II of Naples,CL:AIRE,Etex Building Performance Limited,Hoskins Circular,National Highways,University of Otago,Brunel University London,DB Group,Network Rail,Chartered Institute of Building,Expedition (United Kingdom),DB Group,Bywaters,Askew Soil & Land Ltd,Buro Happold Limited,ONS,Hunan Women'S University,BSI,GCP Applied Technologies,UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE,540 World LLP,Building Research Establishment Ltd BRE,Northumberland County Council,Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity,Mace (United Kingdom),Askew Soil & Land Ltd,UK Coll for Res in Infra & Cities UKCRIC,540 World LLP,Granta Design (United Kingdom),Great Ormond Street Hospital,LafargeHolcim (France),Cambridge CSIC,Shire Mineral & Machinery Suppliers,Specwall-Alliance Ltd,FORTIS IBA,ENVIRONMENT AGENCY,Cambridge CSIC,Mineral Products Association,Story Contracting Ltd,University of Otago,Contaminated Land: Applications in the Real Environments,CIRIA,Environment Agency,Mineral Products Association,Arup Group (United Kingdom),Yale University,GCP Applied Technologies,UK QUALITY ASH ASSOCIATION,Hunan University,Department for Transport,HKPU,SJTU,LafargeHolcim,DEFRAFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V011820/1Funder Contribution: 4,430,350 GBP177 million tonnes of virgin aggregates, 15 million tonnes of cement and 2 billion bricks were used to build houses, civic and commercial buildings, roads and railways, etc, in the UK in 2016. Meanwhile, 64 million tonnes of waste arose from construction and demolition. Materials from construction and demolition are mainly managed by down-cycling with loss of the value imparted to them by energy-intensive and polluting manufacturing processes; for example, high value concrete is broken down into low value aggregate. Environmental damage is associated with the whole linear life cycles of mineral-based construction materials, and includes scarring of the landscape and habitat destruction when minerals are extracted from the earth; depletion of mineral and energy resources; and water use and emission of greenhouse gases and other pollutants to air, land and water, during extraction, processing, use and demolition. It is important to take action now, to return materials to the resource loop in a Circular Economy, and reduce the amount of extraction from the earth, as the amount we build increases each year. For example, the UK plans spend £600 billion to build infrastructure in the next decade. The UKRI National Interdisciplinary Circular Economy Research Centre for Mineral-based Construction Materials therefore aims to do more with less mineral-based construction materials, to reduce costs to industry, reduce waste and pollution, and benefit the natural environment that we depend on. There is potential for mineral-based construction materials to be reused and recycled at higher value, for example, by refurbishing rather than demolishing, or by building using reusable modules that can be taken apart rather than demolished, so all the energy that went into making them isn't wasted. It may also be possible to substitute minerals from natural sources by other types of mineral wastes, such as the 76 million tonnes of waste arising from excavation and quarrying, 14 million tonnes of mineral wastes that come from other industries, or 4 billion tonnes of historical mining wastes. We can also be more frugal in our use of mineral-based construction materials, by designing materials, products and structures to use less primary raw materials, last longer, and be suitable for repurposing rather than demolition, and using new manufacturing techniques. First, our research will try to better understand how mineral-based construction materials flow through the economy, over all the stages of their life cycle, including extraction, processing, manufacture, and end-of-life. The Centre will work to support the National Materials Database planned by the Office of National Statistics, which will capture how, where and when materials are used and waste arises, so that we have the information to improve this system. We will also study how any changes we might make to practices around minerals use would affect the environment and the economy, such as greenhouse gas emissions, costs to businesses, or jobs. Second, we will work on technical improvements that we can make in design of mineral-based products and structures, and in all the life-cycle stages of mineral-based construction materials. Third, we will look at how changes in current business models and practices could support use of less mineral-based construction materials, such as how they might be able to move more quickly to new technologies, or how they might use digital technologies to keep track of materials. We will explore how the government can support these changes, and how we can provide education so that everyone working in this system understands what they need to do. In the first 4 years of our Centre, 15 postdoctoral researchers will gain research experience working in the universities for 2y and will then work with an industrial collaborator for a year, to implement the results of their research. More than 20 PhD and 30 MSc students will also be trained in the Centre.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2024Partners:Trent Refractories Ltd, Netzsch Instruments, Catal International Ltd, Capital Refractories Limited, Diageo (United Kingdom) +128 partnersTrent Refractories Ltd,Netzsch Instruments,Catal International Ltd,Capital Refractories Limited,Diageo (United Kingdom),NWL,Saica Paper UK Ltd,Cranfield University,NETZSCH (UK),Cast Metals Federation,International Synergies Ltd,Celsa Steel UK,ANSYS,Sheffield Refractories Ltd,Imerys (United Kingdom),CLT Carbon Limiting Technologies,Hanson Heidelberg Cement Group,British Ceramic Confederation,Almath Crucibles Ltd,Zentia (Ceiling Solutions Limited) (UK),CRODA EUROPE LTD,Glass Technology Services Ltd GTS,Emerson Advanced Design Center,NSG Group (UK),Jayplas (J&A Young (Leicester) Ltd),EnergyNest (Norway),Magnet Applications Ltd,Materials Processing Institute (MPI),Imerys,F.I.C (UK) Limited,SIEMENS PLC,Society of Glass Technology,AkzoNobel UK,Heraeus (United Kingdom),Zentia (Ceiling Solutions Limited) (UK),Alpek Polyester UK Ltd,Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining,Fives Stein Limited,Texon (UK),Morgan Advanced Materials plc (UK),Beatson Clark Limited,North East of England Process Industry Cluster (United Kingdom),Greenology (Teeside) Limited,Morgan Advanced Materials,Alpek Polyester UK Ltd,KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER NETWORK LIMITED,[no title available],CRODA EUROPE LIMITED,Greenology (Teeside) Limited,VESUVIUS UK LTD,CRANFIELD UNIVERSITY,Diageo plc,LafargeHolcim (France),Fives Stein Limited,Bunting Magnetics Europe (UK),URM (UK) Limited,Liberty House Group (UK),AkzoNobel UK,CERAM Research,Cast Metals Federation (United Kingdom),URM (UK) Limited,Breedon Cement Ltd,Guardian Industries (International),Liberty House Group (UK),Capital Refractories Limited,IS-Instruments Ltd,EnergyNest AS,Aluminium Federation Ltd,Kimberly-Clark Limited (UK),Glass Futures Ltd,British Glass,Celsa Steel UK,Society of Glass Technology,Saint Gobain Glass Industry,Emerson Advanced Design Center,British Glass,Constellium UK Ltd,Vesuvius (United Kingdom),Northumbrian Water Group plc,Power Minerals Ltd,Chemical Industries Association Ltd,Saint Gobain Glass Industry,Catal International Ltd,Knowledge Transfer Network,Encirc (United Kingdom),Heraeus Electro-Nite,AMETEK UK,British Glass,Hanson Heidelberg Cement Group,Mineral Products Association,North East Process Industry ClusterNEPIC,Chemical Industries Association Ltd,Texon (UK),Industry Wales,IOM3,Industry Wales,Norton Aluminium Ltd,International Synergies Ltd,Morgan Advanced Materials (United Kingdom),North East Process Industry ClusterNEPIC,Norton Aluminium Ltd,CLT Carbon Limiting Technologies,Innovate UK,IS Instruments (United Kingdom),Materials Processing Institute (MPI),Kimberly-Clark Limited (UK),Power Minerals Ltd,Almath Crucibles Ltd,Breedon Cement Ltd,Confederation of Paper Industries,Aluminium Federation Ltd,Mineral Products Association,Luxfer MEL Technologies,Jayplas (J&A Young (Leicester) Ltd),Siemens plc (UK),AkzoNobel (United Kingdom),Confederation of Paper Industries,Encirc Ltd,Saica Paper UK Ltd,F.I.C (UK) Limited,Croda (United Kingdom),Constellium (United Kingdom),Guardian Industries (United States),AMETEK (UK),Glass Technology Services,Glass Futures Ltd,Sheffield Refractories Ltd,Ansys UK Ltd,LafargeHolcim,Beatson Clark Limited,British Ceramic Confederation,NSG Holding (Europe) Limited,Lucideon (United Kingdom)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V054627/1Funder Contribution: 4,836,820 GBPThe Transforming the Foundation Industries Challenge has set out the background of the six foundation industries; cement, ceramics, chemicals, glass, metals and paper, which produce 28 Mt pa (75% of all materials in our economy) with a value of £52Bn but also create 10% of UK CO2 emissions. These materials industries are the root of all supply chains providing fundamental products into the industrial sector, often in vertically-integrated fashion. They have a number of common factors: they are water, resource and energy-intensive, often needing high temperature processing; they share processes such as grinding, heating and cooling; they produce high-volume, often pernicious waste streams, including heat; and they have low profit margins, making them vulnerable to energy cost changes and to foreign competition. Our Vision is to build a proactive, multidisciplinary research and practice driven Research and Innovation Hub that optimises the flows of all resources within and between the FIs. The Hub will work with communities where the industries are located to assist the UK in achieving its Net Zero 2050 targets, and transform these industries into modern manufactories which are non-polluting, resource efficient and attractive places to be employed. TransFIRe is a consortium of 20 investigators from 12 institutions, 49 companies and 14 NGO and government organisations related to the sectors, with expertise across the FIs as well as energy mapping, life cycle and sustainability, industrial symbiosis, computer science, AI and digital manufacturing, management, social science and technology transfer. TransFIRe will initially focus on three major challenges: 1 Transferring best practice - applying "Gentani": Across the FIs there are many processes that are similar, e.g. comminution, granulation, drying, cooling, heat exchange, materials transportation and handling. Using the philosophy Gentani (minimum resource needed to carry out a process) this research would benchmark and identify best practices considering resource efficiencies (energy, water etc.) and environmental impacts (dust, emissions etc.) across sectors and share information horizontally. 2 Where there's muck there's brass - creating new materials and process opportunities. Key to the transformation of our Foundation Industries will be development of smart, new materials and processes that enable cheaper, lower-energy and lower-carbon products. Through supporting a combination of fundamental research and focused technology development, the Hub will directly address these needs. For example, all sectors have material waste streams that could be used as raw materials for other sectors in the industrial landscape with little or no further processing. There is great potential to add more value by "upcycling" waste by further processes to develop new materials and alternative by-products from innovative processing technologies with less environmental impact. This requires novel industrial symbioses and relationships, sustainable and circular business models and governance arrangements. 3 Working with communities - co-development of new business and social enterprises. Large volumes of warm air and water are produced across the sectors, providing opportunities for low grade energy capture. Collaboratively with communities around FIs, we will identify the potential for co-located initiatives (district heating, market gardening etc.). This research will highlight issues of equality, diversity and inclusiveness, investigating the potential from societal, environmental, technical, business and governance perspectives. Added value to the project comes from the £3.5 M in-kind support of materials and equipment and use of manufacturing sites for real-life testing as well as a number of linked and aligned PhDs/EngDs from HEIs and partners This in-kind support will offer even greater return on investment and strongly embed the findings and operationalise them within the sector.
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