GoodGuide iPhone app helps you find eco-friendly products

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Дата: 24-06-2010 | Автор: Yanina Lonskaya | Размещено: Environment, Green technologies, Health and Nature, Opinions, Без рубрики

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The GoodGuide iPhone app offers ratings of environmental impact for thousands of consumer products. This free app covers 50,000 products and even allows you to scan barcodes while shopping.

When you search for or scan a product contained in its database, the GoodGuide gives you a number between 1 and 10 for that product, 10 being the most environmentally friendly. It then breaks that number down into ratings for health, environmental and social impacts. It also provides you with “Behind the Rating” details about why that product earned its rating.

Of course these things are hard to quantify, and no doubt arguments could be made against specific ratings, but it’s good to see someone at least trying to provide shoppers with a tool they can use to evaluate the environmental impact of the products they’re putting in their carts and taking home to their families.

http://gelvin.squarespace.com/green-technology-forum/2010/6/15/goodguide-iphone-app-helps-you-find-eco-friendly-products.html

New ‘Green’ Technologies Make Die Castings Stronger

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Test castings made using a conventional runner on left and the narrow, metal-saving ATM runner on the right. (Credit: Mark Fergus)

ScienceDaily (Apr. 20, 2010) — Conventional die castings can be made stronger using new, more environmentally friendly technologies developed by CSIRO.

The two new technologies — a dynamic gating system and the ‘ATM runner system’ — produce high-integrity castings with fine-grained microstructure and low porosity by improving the feed of molten metal into the casting. Both systems are suitable for use with aluminium and magnesium alloys.

“This is accomplished by influencing the flow behaviour of the molten metal, the fill pattern of the die, and subsequent solidification,” says the leader of CSIRO’s research team of metallurgists and casting engineers, Dr Rob O’Donnell.

“Our researchers realised that by changing the way in which molten metal is delivered to the die we could take advantage of the high pressure inherent in the process to make castings with finer microstructure and lower porosity,” Dr O’Donnell says.

The researchers achieved higher quality castings by changing the architecture of the runners (the passages along which molten metal flows into the die) and the gate (the narrow opening to the die cavity).

“Our improved melt delivery systems are cost-effective, can be used with existing casting machines, and can significantly reduce the mass of the metal runner, wasting less metal.

“They represent new ‘green’ die casting technologies, which are low-energy and highly effective.”

Gases captured during the passage of the molten metal into the die cavity cause porosity, which together with voids created during solidification, reduces the quality of the casting.

Die castings with low porosity are stronger and can be successfully heat treated post-casting to improve their mechanical properties.

The dynamic gating system (DGS) incorporates a gate capable of changing its size in response to the pressure of the melt during filling.

X-ray analysis of test castings showed a significant improvement in density in both thicker and thinner areas of the casting, when the dynamic gate was used.

A paper describing the dynamic gating system received the best paper award at the North American Die Casting Association (NADCA) CastExpo10 congress, held in March in Orlando, Florida.

A reviewer of the paper commended the CSIRO researchers for producing a technology with “real-world” relevance to high pressure die casting, saying “This is a technology that has significant promise in the future of our industry.”

ATM technology uses a revolutionary melt delivery system for the high pressure die casting (HPDC) process, which is cheaper to operate than conventional HPDC.

The ATM casting technology has been proven by a number of companies in commercial production, and its effectiveness in reducing both shot weight and reject rates has been demonstrated.

“ATM conditions the melt prior to filling the cavity so that the melt enters the die in a less viscous, ‘runnier’ state,” Dr O’Donnell said.

“As a result, melt flow is improved and separate melt fronts fuse together better when they meet within the casting.”

The outcome is a casting with a more uniform distribution of nucleation sites, a refined, homogenous microstructure, and exceptionally low porosity.

CSIRO seeks commercial partners interested in licensing either the dynamic gating system or the ATM melt delivery system.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/04/100417094404.htm

Environmental technology

Environmental technology (abbreviated as envirotech) or green technology (abbreviated as greentech) or clean technology (abbreviated as cleantech) is the application of the environmental science to conserve the natural environment and resources, and to curb the negative impacts of human involvement. Sustainable development is the core of environmental technologies.

Alternative and clean powerPrinciples:
Green syndicalism
Sustainability
Sustainable design
Sustainable engineering
Scientists continue to search for clean energy alternatives to our current power production methods. Some technologies such as anaerobic digestion produce renewable energy from waste materials. The global reduction of greenhouse gases is dependent on the adoption of energy conservation technologies at industrial level as well as this clean energy generation. That includes using unleaded gasoline, solar energy and alternative fuel vehicles, including plug-in hybrid and hybrid electric vehicles.Since electric motors consume 60% of all electricity generated,[citation needed] advanced energy efficient electric motor (and electric generator) technology that are cost effective to encourage their application, such as the brushless wound-rotor doubly-fed electric machine and energy saving module, can reduce the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) and sulfur dioxide (SO2) that would otherwise be introduced to the atmosphere, if electricity is generated using fossil fuels. Greasestock is an event held yearly in Yorktown Heights, New York which is one of the largest showcases of environmental technology in the United States.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_technology

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