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A Korean Air flight to Taiwan was forced to return to Incheon airport west of Seoul after a sudden depressurization on the plane, a Boeing 737 Max 8, the transport ministry said Tuesday.
The ministry said 19 of the 133 people aboard the flight Saturday were sent to hospitals due to ear pain and nosebleeds, but none suffered serious injuries.
The airline and the ministry said the cause of the problem was under investigation. The aircraft was grounded and the ministry ordered South Korea’s 11 airlines to examine pressurization systems in all their 400 aircraft.
The sudden depressurization occurred about 50 minutes after the flight’s departure.
Separately, Malaysia Airlines said one of its flights en route to Bangkok on Monday made a U-turn back to Kuala Lumpur after the Airbus A-330 experienced a “pressurization issue.”
Malaysia Airlines said its pilots initiated an emergency descent even though the aircraft had not reached the altitude of 8,000 feet and oxygen masks were not deployed. Flight MH780 was carrying 164 passengers and 12 crew members.
An investigation was underway.
The 737 Max has a troubled history. After Max jets crashed in 2018 in Indonesia and 2019 in Ethiopia, killing 346 people, the FAA and other regulators grounded the aircraft worldwide for more than a year and a half.
Concerns over the company’s best-selling commercial aircraft were renewed after a panel blew out of a 737 Max during an Alaska Airlines flight in January. No one was seriously injured in the incident.
Citation:
Korean Air, Malaysia Airlines flights disrupted by pressurization problems (2024, June 25)
retrieved 25 June 2024
from https://techxplore.com/news/2024-06-korean-air-malaysia-airlines-flights.html
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part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.
Greener sensors, circuit boards and other electronic devices are being developed by EU researchers to reduce unsustainably high levels of e-waste.
To develop eco-friendly electronics such as sensors and circuit boards, Dr. Valerio Beni is following the paper trail—literally.
An expert in green chemistry at Swedish research institute RISE, Beni has switched his focus to wood from pulp in a bid to make consumer electronic devices that have no carbon footprint and are easier to recycle.
In the woodwork
He and his colleagues discovered that producing pulp and turning it into paper for a new generation of electronics required burning too much energy for the effort to be as environmentally friendly as they had hoped.
“So we thought, why don’t we take a step back and go to the initial material for making paper?” said Beni. “That is wood.”
He leads a research project to explore ways to make consumer electronics with wood-based materials.
Called HyPELignum, the project runs for four years through September 2026 and brings together research institutes, a university and industry representatives from Austria, the Netherlands, Slovenia and Spain.
The life cycles of current electronics are unsustainable. In addition to the energy and raw materials needed for production, the gadgets result in mountains of waste once they get discarded.
In 2022, the world generated a record 62 billion metric tons of e-waste—or 7.8 kilograms per person—with Europe producing 17.6 billion metric tons, more than any other region, according to United Nations data.
That worldwide mountain has almost doubled from 34 billion metric tons in 2010 and is projected to increase to 82 billion metric tons by 2030.
In addition to growing fast, e-waste is complex to manage, according to the UN. In 2022, only about a fifth of global e-waste was recycled—although Europe fared better by recycling around 43%.
Better boards
Circuit boards are the main component of e-waste.
As much as 60% of the environmental impact of electronics is caused by a device’s circuit board, according to Beni.
The boards are a layered matrix of materials—usually resins, plastics and copper, which are hard to recycle. They’re etched to imprint metal circuits, onto which electronic components can be soldered.
As an alternative, the HyPELignum team is developing two types of wooden circuit board.
One is made of thin layers of wood, a bit like plywood. The other is constructed from cellulose fibers extracted from wood and wood waste.
“The idea is to try and replace some of the high carbon-intensive materials in electronics with low carbon-intensive material,” Beni said.
The circuits are printed—rather than etched—onto the wooden boards using conductive metal inks developed by the project. These inks also contain cellulose and bio-based plastics produced from wood.
At the end of their life, the wooden boards should be easier to recycle than traditional circuit boards. It might even be possible to compost them.
New layers
A key challenge with recycling electronics is separating the components from the circuit boards.
To tackle this, the HyPELignum researchers are developing thermally and chemically degradable layers that can be placed between the wood and the printed circuits.
When these are destroyed at the end of a product’s life, the circuits and electrical components fall off the wood. The wooden board and the mainly metal circuit and components can then be sent to different recycling streams.
Furthermore, the degradable layers are also derived from wood. The project has been producing them from lignin extracted from wood waste.
Such “green chemistry” emits much less carbon dioxide (CO2) by featuring biogenic materials that can be renewed rather than fossil oil, according to Beni.
“Wood and biogenic materials are more or less zero in terms of CO2 impact,” he said. “They absorb CO2 to grow and then they release the same CO2 when used.”
More and more
The global population’s ever-increasing appetite for digital devices is driving the need for greener versions, according to Dr. Corne Rentrop, an expert in electronics and sustainable production at Dutch research organization TNO.
“We want more data, we want more connectivity, we want to have internet everywhere, so the amount of electronics needed to equip that is growing constantly,” Rentrop said.
At the same time, the lifetime of electronics is decreasing.
“If you look at your electronic devices, they last for four to five years,” Rentrop said. “That is basically it.”
He leads a separate project to reduce the carbon footprint of electronic-device production and improve recycling.
Called ECOTRON, it runs for four years through August 2026 and has a range of participants from Belgium, the Czech Republic, Finland, France, Italy, the Netherlands and Spain.
Flexible films
Like its HyPELignum counterpart, the ECOTRON team is seeking to replace traditional circuit boards with ones made from renewable materials.
“We can be more sustainable because the process requires less energy than producing standard circuit boards,” Rentrop said.
But instead of wood, he and his colleagues are creating flexible films from materials like bio-based plastics and paper.
At the end of their life, bioplastic boards could be melted and recycled—and maybe even composted.
“Compostable electronics would be fantastic,” Rentrop said. “Paper is of course a compostable material, but the inks and the electrical components are not.”
To overcome this hurdle, the project is developing reversible interconnects that can be triggered to release the electrical components.
Company cases
The ECOTRON researchers are taking existing products and working to replace them with more sustainable electronics.
A Finnish company named Polar Electro, which makes devices that monitor fitness and athletic training, is participating in an effort to produce a wearable chest strap that measures a person’s heart rate.
The project has replaced an existing Polar Electro chest strap with a bio-based version whose performance is comparable, according to Rentrop.
Working with pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson, the team is developing smart stickers that contain temperature loggers for vaccine packages.
Health care professionals administering vaccines can access this temperature data using a handheld device such as a smartphone to check that each dose has been stored properly.
In this case, the researchers are working with paper, producing devices that can be recycled.
“We are making an electronic device which is regarded as paper,” Rentrop said. “This is recycling by design.”
Citation:
Greener electronics being developed to reduce unsustainably high levels of e-waste (2024, June 14)
retrieved 25 June 2024
from https://techxplore.com/news/2024-06-greener-electronics-unsustainably-high.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.
If you’re in some spots in Biscayne Bay during the weekend, you might be greeted with an unpleasant sight: dead fish floating on the surface.
That’s the unfortunate aftermath of the relentless rain that South Florida experienced last week—and a reminder of much larger fish kills that have plagued Biscayne Bay in the past few years.
The damage this time seems limited. About 2,000 fish were estimated dead in northern Biscayne Bay, with reports from Morningside to North Bay Village and up to 95th Street. The victims were mostly toadfish, a small species that lives on the bottom in shallow coastal areas that tend to be most dangerous for fish, according to Miami Waterkeeper, a clean-water advocacy group.
Biscayne Bay is no stranger to fish kills. Since 2020, the bay has experienced at least four fish kills. Miami Waterkeeper said the recent heavy rain was likely to blame for the latest one. The surge of freshwater flowing into the bay lowers salinity, which can drive off or even kill some fish.
Little River, which empties into the bay, is one of the county’s most polluted waterways and has been overflowing with storm water since June 11, according to Miami Waterkeeper.
“The freshwater anoxic flow originating from the Little River and Biscayne Canal likely contributed to the conditions that have led to the fish deaths. It’s important to note that there are salinity-control structures in place that release freshwater into the affected area to alleviate flooding and lower the groundwater levels,” said Adriana González Fernández, Miami Waterkeeper’s science and research director.
The Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department said there were several wastewater flows across the region caused by the storms but none made direct contact with surface water. But runoff carries pollutants and animal waste that aren’t helping fish either.
“After storms and flooding, residents should generally expect an increase in pollutants such as bacteria, sediment, chemicals and debris in waterways,” Fernández said. “The safety of waterways after storms can vary depending on the severity of the event and the area affected.”
On one of the days of heaviest rains, June 12, Miami Waterkeeper tested South Florida areas, including Little River, for enterococci, a bacteria that is an indicator of human waste, and found that all water they tested was unsuitable for recreational use. It’s not necessarily always a result of storms, but it definitely can be influenced by them, she said.
Miami-Dade Chief Bay and Water Resources Officer Loren Parra told WPLG-ABC 10 that she was “devastated to see these reports, certainly so early in the rainy season.”
The station shot video of dozens of dead fish floating among debris in murky water in the bay on June 18—days after the region was swamped by up to 20 inches of rain in spots, including Northeast Miami-Dade.
Climate change isn’t helping either. South Florida had a string of fish kills last summer, which was the hottest on record. Researchers blamed it on rising temperatures, which can reduce oxygen in the water and trigger algae blooms that do the same. Climate scientists say It also can turn storm systems wetter.
“Changing climates, characterized by more intense and frequent rain events in South Florida, might exacerbate these fish-kill incidents,” Fernández said. “This trend suggests that such fish kills may become more frequent unless significant climate-mitigation efforts are undertaken.”
2024 Miami Herald. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Citation:
Fish kill reported in Biscayne Bay: Waterkeeper blames it on heavy rain (2024, June 24)
retrieved 25 June 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-06-fish-biscayne-bay-waterkeeper-blames.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.