The Materials Processing Institute has invested £3.1 million into key equipment and facilities as part of a ground-breaking programme to support scaling-up sustainable technologies and industrial decarbonisation for the foundation industries, which contributes £50 billion to the UK economy and produce 75% of all materials globally.

Materials Processing Institute Invests £3.1 Million into Sustainable Technologies Research - The Aluminium Federation

EconoMISER, a UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) funded programme, is the first project delivered by the Foundation Industry Sustainability Consortium (FISC) which comprises leading research and technology centres, Henry Royce Institute, Glass Futures Ltd, Centre for Process Innovation, Lucideon and the Materials Processing Institute. These centres are all working together across five core areas: alternative fuels, recycling and reuse, digital control and sensors, process optimisation and sustainable materials development to accelerate the foundation industries’ journey towards sustainability and net-zero objectives.

The £3.1m investment has enabled the Institute to broaden its research, development and innovation capabilities for the foundation industries. It has included:

  • New equipment for the Institute’s Advanced Materials Development Centre to support mechanical testing, vacuum brazing and forging.
  • Hydrogen facilities to explore new routes to decarbonisation.
  • Equipment to help get valuable materials back into use through waste segregation, identifying opportunities for re-use and minimising associated costs.
  • Scaled-up hydrometallurgy laboratory capabilities.
  • Dedicated scale-up zones for client pilot scale development and pre-production scale testing, together with research and development and process analysis.

Gerard Stephens, Head of Research and Technology at the Materials Processing Institute, commented: “Our facilities are uniquely equipped to support the foundation industries in integrating new, greener technologies into their operations. This investment enables the Institute to lead this critical research and it also strengthens the UK’s position in pioneering and commercialising industrial sustainability. “All foundation industries stakeholders and partners can access and benefit from the advancements made possible by these significant investments that will foster growth and innovation through improved resource efficiency, the scaling up of sustainable products, decarbonisation of industrial processes and integration of Industry 4.0 solutions.”

To read the full article, please visit the Material’s Processing Institute’s website: Materials Processing Institute invests £3.1m into sustainable technologies research – 7 May 2024 (mpiuk.com)

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