Remove Engine Remove Oil Remove Range Remove Water
article thumbnail

MAN reports successful first running of ammonia two-stroke engine

Green Car Congress

MAN Energy Solutions announced the successful first running of a test engine on ammonia at its Research Centre Copenhagen (RCC). This marks a major milestone on our road to developing a full-scale two-stroke ammonia marine engine. This marks a major milestone on our road to developing a full-scale two-stroke ammonia marine engine.

Engine 369
article thumbnail

BASF develops engineering plastic with optimized sliding friction properties; for automotive parts in contact with hot oil

Green Car Congress

BASF is launching an engineering plastic that is particularly suited for automotive parts that come into contact with hot oil. The new polyethersulfone (PESU) Ultrason E0510 C2TR shows very good tribological properties, high oil resistance and excellent dimensional stability also with broad ranges of temperature fluctuations.

Oil 186
article thumbnail

TUAT team develops more efficient method to recover heavy oil using novel chemical flooding

Green Car Congress

By making use of a previously undesired side effect in oil recovery, researchers at Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology (TUAT) have developed a method that yields up to 20% more heavy oil than traditional methods. Generally, less than 10% of heavy oil may be produced from reservoirs by natural flow after drilling the well.

Oil 243
article thumbnail

Empa and partners exploring DME as fuel with new heavy-duty test engine

Green Car Congress

Empa, together with FPT Motorenforschung AG Arbon, Politechnico di Milano, lubricant manufacturer Motorex and other partners, is exporing the use of DME as a fuel for heavy-duty engines. A DME test engine has been in operation on a dynamometer in Empa’s Automotive Powertrains Technologies Laboratory. Image: Empa. —Patrik Soltic.

Engine 410
article thumbnail

ExxonMobil, Georgia Tech and Imperial College London publish joint research on potential breakthrough in membrane technology for oil refining

Green Car Congress

Scientists from ExxonMobil, the Georgia Institute of Technology and Imperial College of London have published in the journal Science joint research on potential breakthroughs in a new membrane technology that could reduce emissions and energy intensity associated with refining crude oil. —Thompson et al. Imperial College London.

Georgia 337
article thumbnail

KAUST team develops process for tunable membranes for energy-efficient crude oil fractionation

Green Car Congress

The membranes, with their ultrathin tunable selective layers, offer an innovative membrane development solution for energy-efficient crude oil fractionation. Suzana Nunes, KAUST professor of chemical and environmental science and engineering. A paper on the work is published in Science. 1105-1110 doi: 10.1126/science.abm7686.

Oil 186
article thumbnail

BP awards Colorado State University $5M to research technology for oil recovery from watered-out wells

Green Car Congress

Colorado State University has obtained a 5-year, $5-million grant from BP to study mechanisms involved with technology for oil recovery from “watered-out” wells. Upward of 70% of the petroleum can remain in the rock formations of many watered-out wells. 2000) Water Control. Bill Bailey et al. Oilfield Review.

Colorado 252