Jefferson, Lewis and St Lawrence Counties Central Trades and Labor Council make endorsements northcountrynow.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from northcountrynow.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Good news for automobile servicing industry, food industry and other low and medium scale enterprises. Soon they will likely have a smart, affordable electric field-assisted membrane separation device at their disposal for oily waste-water treatment Get more Small Business News and Business News on Zee Business.
Share
New Delhi: Soon automobile servicing industry, food industry, and other low and medium scale enterprises can have a smart, affordable electric field-assisted membrane separation device at their disposal for oily waste water treatment.
Low-income group users mostly cannot afford the high cost of treatment technologies available for handling oily wastewater generated at their source points. As a result, large amount of untreated oily wastewater is discharged into the aquatic bodies without following the guidelines of the Pollution Control Board.
The technology developed by
Dr Chiranjib Bhattacharjee, Professor at the Chemical Engineering Department in Jadavpur University, Kolkata, uses a combination of Electrocoagulation and Electroflotation Enhanced Membrane Module (ECEFMM) techniques for waste water treatment.
A technology developed by researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Hyderabad to treat 'kala-azar' has been repurposed to treat black fungus patients in a cost-effective and convenient manner.
Kaylee McCormack
Kaylee McCormack is a third-year doctoral student in the Chemical Engineering Department at MIT. Her research focuses on developing earth-abundant catalysts for fuel cells and water electrolysis and leveraging core-shell electrocatalyst architectures and confinement effects. Beyond her interests in sustainable energy, she is an active student advocate with a passion for working towards policies that better protect students and the public. In the past, she has worked on diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives and advocated for better protections against harassment and discrimination and has developed an enthusiasm for improving American water policy.
Articles by Kaylee McCormack