Aston University has teamed up with Midlands-based casthouse technology specialists through a Knowledge Transfer Partnership to develop a suite of energy-efficient aluminium recycling systems that are expected to reduce energy consumption by up to 50%. This new partnership with Mechaterm International follows the successful completion of the company’s first collaboration with Aston University which resulted in a more intelligent design process for furnaces and ancillary equipment for the global aluminium industry using complex design automation techniques and algorithms. A KTP is a three-way collaboration between a business, an academic partner and a highly qualified researcher, known as a KTP associate. Mechatherm International Limited is a leading provider of bespoke casthouse equipment to the aluminium industry. Due to increasing energy costs, aluminium production from ore is becoming less commercially viable, leading to many producers cutting back on primary aluminium production. However, global demand for aluminium and recycling aluminium scrap is growing. Available technologies have high operational costs associated with poor thermal management, highlighting the acute need for energy-efficient recycling solutions. This partnership will enable Mechatherm to gain critical knowledge in thermal management processes to develop and take to market a range of cost-efficient solutions which improve energy efficiency through waste heat utilisation. The Aston University team will be led by Dr Ahmed Rezk and Dr Muhammed Imran, senior lecturers in mechanical and design engineering. Their research activities aim to develop innovative thermal energy systems that improve energy performance using modelling and optimisation, thermodynamics and heat and mass transfer.
Aston University has teamed up with Midlands-based casthouse technology specialists through a Knowledge Transfer Partnership to develop a suite of energy-efficient aluminium recycling systems that are expected to reduce energy consumption by up to 50%. This new partnership with Mechaterm International follows the successful completion of the company’s first collaboration with Aston University which resulted in a more intelligent design process for furnaces and ancillary equipment for the global aluminium industry using complex design automation techniques and algorithms. A KTP is a three-way collaboration between a business, an academic partner and a highly qualified researcher, known as a KTP associate. Mechatherm International Limited is a leading provider of bespoke casthouse equipment to the aluminium industry. Due to increasing energy costs, aluminium production from ore is becoming less commercially viable, leading to many producers cutting back on primary aluminium production. However, global demand for aluminium and recycling aluminium scrap is growing. Available technologies have high operational costs associated with poor thermal management, highlighting the acute need for energy-efficient recycling solutions. This partnership will enable Mechatherm to gain critical knowledge in thermal management processes to develop and take to market a range of cost-efficient solutions which improve energy efficiency through waste heat utilisation. The Aston University team will be led by Dr Ahmed Rezk and Dr Muhammed Imran, senior lecturers in mechanical and design engineering. Their research activities aim to develop innovative thermal energy systems that improve energy performance using modelling and optimisation, thermodynamics and heat and mass transfer.