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Biological in situ methanation: Gassing concept and feeding strategy for enhanced performance
(2017)
The expansion of fluctuating renewable electricity production from wind and solar energy requires huge storage capacities. Power-to-gas (PtG) can contribute to tackle that issue via a two-step process, the electrolytic production of hydrogen and a subsequent methanation step (with additional CO2). The resulting fully grid compatible methane, also known as synthetic natural gas (SNG), can be both stored and transported in the vast existing natural gas infrastructure.
To overcome current major drawbacks of PtG, the relatively low efficiency and the high costs, we developed an improved method for the methanation step. In our approach we use a further development of the biological in situ methanation of hydrogen in biogas plants. Because this strategy uses directly internal residual CO2 from the biogas process in the biogas plant, you neither need additional external CO2 nor special reactors. Thus, PtG is combined with the production of an upgraded highly methane rich raw biogas.
However, the low solubility of hydrogen in aqueous solutions and the exploitation of the maximum biological production rates are still an engineering challenge for high performance biological in situ methanation.
In our experiments a setup with membrane gassing turned out to be most promising to ensure a sufficient gas liquid mass transfer of the hydrogen. The monitoring of hydrogenotrophic and aceticlastic archaea showed some adaption of these microbial subgroups to the hydrogen feed.
In order to achieve high methane concentrations of more than 90 % in the raw biogas a CO2-controlled hydrogen feed flow rate is suggested. For methane concentrations lower than 90 % simple current controlled hydrogen supply can be applied.
We present a two-dimensional (2D) planar chromatographic separation of estrogenic active compounds on RP-18 W (Merck, 1.14296) phase. A mixture of 8 substances was separated using a solvent mix consisting of hexane, ethyl acetate, acetone (55:15:10, v/v) in the first direction and of acetone and water (15:10, v/v) in the second direction. Separation was performed on an RP-18 W plate over a distance of 70 mm. This 2D-separation method can be used to quantify 17α-ethinylestradiol (EE2) in an effect-directed analysis, using the yeast strain Saccharomyces cerevisiae BJ3505. The test strain (according to McDonnell) contains the estrogen receptor. Its activation by estrogen active compounds is measured by inducing the reporter gene lacZ which encodes the enzyme β-galactosidase. This enzyme activity is determined on plate by using the fluorescent substrate MUG (4-methylumbelliferyl-β-d-galactopyranoside).
Battery degradation is a complex physicochemical process that strongly depends on operating conditions. We present a model-based analysis of lithium-ion battery degradation in a stationary photovoltaic battery system. We use a multi-scale multi-physics model of a graphite/lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4, LFP) cell including solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) formation. The cell-level model is dynamically coupled to a system-level model consisting of photovoltaics (PV), inverter, load, grid interaction, and energy management system, fed with historic weather data. Simulations are carried out for two load scenarios, a single-family house and an office tract, over annual operation cycles with one-minute time resolution. As key result, we show that the charging process causes a peak in degradation rate due to electrochemical charge overpotentials. The main drivers for cell ageing are therefore not only a high state of charge (SOC), but the charging process leading towards high SOC. We also show that the load situation not only influences system parameters like self-sufficiency and self-consumption, but also has a significant impact on battery ageing. We assess reduced charge cut-off voltage as ageing mitigation strategy.
Die vorliegende Erfindung betrifft ein Verfahren zum digitalen Drucken einer Keramikfarbe auf einem Substrat, wobei die Keramik der Keramikfarbe auf mindestens den Schmelzpunkt der Keramik mittels eines Laserstrahls simultan zu dem Aufbringen der Keramikfarbe auf ein Substrat mittels eines Druckkopfes erwärmt wird. Weiterhin betrifft die vorliegende Erfindung auch die Verwendung eines Laserstrahls in einer Vorrichtung zum digitalen Drucken einer Keramikfarbe auf einem Substrat, wobei der Laserstrahl die Keramik der Keramikfarbe auf mindestens den Schmelzpunkt der Keramik simultan zu dem Aufbringen der Keramikfarbe auf ein Substrat mittels eines Druckkopfes der Vorrichtung erwärmt. Die vorliegende Erfindung betrifft weiterhin auch eine Vorrichtung zum digitalen Drucken einer Keramikfarbe auf einem Substrat, die einen Druckkopf zum Aufbringen einer Keramikfarbe auf ein Substrat sowie einen Laser zum Erwärmen der Keramik der Keramikfarbe auf mindestens den Schmelzpunkt der Keramik mittels eines Laserstrahls umfasst.
Die vorliegende Erfindung betrifft ein Verfahren zum digitalen Drucken einer Keramikfarbe auf einem Substrat, wobei die Keramik der Keramikfarbe auf mindestens den Schmelzpunkt der Keramik mittels eines Laserstrahls simultan zu dem Aufbringen der Keramikfarbe auf ein Substrat mittels eines Druckkopfes erwärmt wird. Weiterhin betrifft die vorliegende Erfindung auch die Verwendung eines Laserstrahls in einer Vorrichtung zum digitalen Drucken einer Keramikfarbe auf einem Substrat, wobei der Laserstrahl die Keramik der Keramikfarbe auf mindestens den Schmelzpunkt der Keramik simultan zu dem Aufbringen der Keramikfarbe auf ein Substrat mittels eines Druckkopfes der Vorrichtung erwärmt. Die vorliegende Erfindung betrifft weiterhin auch eine Vorrichtung zum digitalen Drucken einer Keramikfarbe auf einem Substrat, die einen Druckkopf zum Aufbringen einer Keramikfarbe auf ein Substrat sowie einen Laser zum Erwärmen der Keramik der Keramikfarbe auf mindestens den Schmelzpunkt der Keramik mittels eines Laserstrahls umfasst.
Die vorliegende Erfindung betrifft ein Verfahren zum Pulverlackieren eines Kunststoff- oder Glasgegenstandes, umfassend die Schritte des Ausbildens einer polaren Beschichtung auf dem Kunststoff- oder Glasgegenstand, umfassend den Teilschritt des Aufbringens einer Beschichtungszusammensetzung auf den Kunststoff- oder Glasgegenstand, wobei die Beschichtungszusammensetzung ein Organosiloxan, das mindestens zwei Si-O-Bindungen aufweist, Wasser, ein organisches Lösemittel und ein pH-regulierendes Mittel, ausgewählt aus einer Brönsted-Säure, in einer katalytischen Menge enthält, mit der Maßgabe, dass die Beschichtungszusammensetzung keinen elektrisch leitfähigen Zusatz, ausgewählt aus ionischen Verbindungen, Metallen, Metall(misch)oxiden, intermetallischen Verbindungen und leitfähigem Kohlenstoff, enthält, sowie die Schritte des Aufbringens eines Pulverlacks auf den derartig beschichteten Kunststoff- oder Glasgegenstand und des Erwärmens des Pulverlacks.
In the course of the last few years, our students are becoming increasingly unhappy. Sometimes they stop attending lectures and even seem not to know how to behave correctly. It feels like they are getting on strike. Consequently, drop-out rates are sky-rocketing. The lecturers/professors are not happy either, adopting an “I-don’t-care” attitude.
An interdisciplinary, international team set in to find out: (1) What are the students unhappy about? Why is it becoming so difficult for them to cope? (2) What does the “I-don’t-care” attitude of professors actually mean? What do they care or not care about? (3) How far do the views of the parties correlate? Could some kind of mutual understanding be achieved?
The findings indicate that, at least at our universities, there is rather a long way to go from “Engineering versus Pedagogy” to “Engineering Pedagogy”.
Cast iron materials are used as materials for cylinder heads for heavy duty internal combustion engines. These components must withstand severe cyclic mechanical and thermal loads throughout their service life. While high-cycle fatigue (HCF) is dominant for the material in the water jacket region, the combination of thermal transients with mechanical load cycles results in thermomechanical fatigue (TMF) of the material in the fire deck region, even including superimposed TMF and HCF loads. Increasing the efficiency of the engines directly leads to increasing combustion pressure and temperature and, thus, lower safety margins for the currently used cast iron materials or alternatively the need for superior cast iron materials. In this paper (Part I), the TMF properties of the lamellar graphite cast iron GJL250 and the vermicular graphite cast iron GJV450 are characterized in uniaxial tests and a mechanism-based model for TMF life prediction is developed for both materials. The model can be used to estimate the fatigue life of components by means of finite-element calculations (Part II of the paper) and supports engineers in finding the appropriate material and design. Furthermore, the effect of the elastic, plastic and creep properties of the materials on the fatigue life can be evaluated with the model. However, for a material selection also the thermophysical properties, controlling to a high level the thermal stresses in the component, must be considered. Hence, the need for integral concepts for material characterization and selection from a multitude of existing and soon-to-be developed cast iron materials is discussed.
For the RoboCup Soccer AdultSize League the humanoid robot Sweaty uses a single fully convolutional neural network to detect and localize the ball, opponents and other features on the field of play. This neural network can be trained from scratch in a few hours and is able to perform in real-time within the constraints of computational resources available on the robot. The time it takes to precess an image is approximately 11 ms. Balls and goal posts are recalled in 99 % of all cases (94.5 % for all objects) accompanied by a false detection rate of 1.2 % (5.2 % for all). The object detection and localization helped Sweaty to become finalist for the RoboCup 2017 in Nagoya.