Organic chemists at Flinders University are working on more sustainable alternatives, with an emphasis on building materials generated from waste products, because firing bricks and producing mortar and cement are relatively expensive processes.
Scientists are rushing to develop more sustainable processes for producing beneficial nutritional goods like Omega-3 fatty acids, biodiesel, aquaculture feed, and animal fodder from quickly proliferating microalgae in order to preserve the world's fish populations and seas.
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New Insulation Takes Heat Off Wool Fibre + Industrial Waste = Green Solution azocleantech.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from azocleantech.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Credit: Flinders University
Waste cooking oil, sulfur and wool offcuts have been put to good use by green chemists at Flinders University to produce a sustainable new kind of housing insulation material.
The latest environmentally friendly building product from experts at the Flinders Chalker Lab and colleagues at Deakin and Liverpool University, has been described in a new paper published in Chemistry Europe ahead of Global Recycling Day (18 March 2021)
The insulating composite was made from the sustainable building blocks of wool fires, sulfur, and canola oil to produce a promising new model for next-generation insulation - not only capitalising on wool s natural low flammability but also to make significant energy savings for property owners and tenants.