
Chiesi Limited
Chiesi Limited
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2016 - 2021Partners:Syngenta (United Kingdom), Nestlé (Switzerland), Procter and Gamble UK, AkzoNobel (United Kingdom), Bristol-Myers Squibb Pharmaceutical Rese +30 partnersSyngenta (United Kingdom),Nestlé (Switzerland),Procter and Gamble UK,AkzoNobel (United Kingdom),Bristol-Myers Squibb Pharmaceutical Rese,Kuecept Ltd,Inca Digital Printers (United Kingdom),Sun Chemical (United Kingdom),Chiesi Limited,Merck & Co Inc,Inca Digital Printers Ltd,MSD (United States),Evotec (United Kingdom),Danone Nutricia Research,AkzoNobel UK,Syngenta Ltd,Croda (United Kingdom),Bristol-Myers Squibb (United Kingdom),Centre for Process Innovation CPI (UK),Nestle SA,Durham University,Croda,AkzoNobel UK,Danone Nutricia,Procter & Gamble (United Kingdom),Merck & Co., Inc. (Sharp & Dohme (MSD)),Sun Chemical Ltd,Durham University,Hovione (Portugal),Kuecept Ltd,Chiesi Limited,Centre for Process Innovation,CPI,Procter and Gamble UK (to be replaced),Hovione (International)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/N025245/1Funder Contribution: 2,270,300 GBP'Watching paint dry' is a metaphor for a boring and pointless activity. In reality, the drying of liquids is a complex process and the imperturbable appearance to the eye can hide a wealth of dynamics occurring inside the liquid. The effect of these internal processes is to change the distribution of materials in the deposit left after drying. We are all familiar with the coffee-ring effect, where split coffee dries to form a ring of solids at the edge of the spill - of little use if you are trying to coat a surface uniformly. This project is all about the drying of droplets, either in air or on a surface; one isolated droplet, two droplets merging or many droplets in a spray. We seek to understand how drops dry and how to control where the particles or molecules in the drop end up after the drop evaporates. When do you get a solid particle or a hollow particle? A round one or a spiky one? A uniform particle or one with shells? Or on a surface: a coffee-ring or a pancake? A uniform deposit, a layered one or a bull's eye? Are particles crystalline or amorphous, are different components mixed or separated? There are a myriad of possibilities for controlling the microstructure and properties of the final particle or film. Drying is complicated for three main reasons. First, many transport processes (evaporation, heat flow, diffusion, convection) occur simultaneously and are strongly coupled. For example, in a small droplet of alcohol and water evaporating on a surface, the liquid inside the drop will flow around in a doughnut pattern tens of times each second. Second, the conditions in a drying droplet are often far from equilibrium. For example, a small water droplet in air or on a smooth clean surface can be cooled to -35 degrees C without freezing. So to understand drying one needs to understand the properties of fluids far from equilibrium. It is generally not possible to predict the final outcome of drying from the properties of simple solutions near equilibrium. Third, drops do not dry in isolation. They may merge or bounce, coalesce or chase each other across a surface. The evaporation of one droplet affects its neighbours. Moving droplets change the flow of air around other droplets, coupling the motion of droplets. Why does anyone care, beyond the intellectual fascination with the bizarre outcomes of droplet drying? Drying of droplets turns out to be a rather important process in practical applications: spray painting, graphics printing, inkjet manufacturing, crop spraying, coating of seeds or tablets, spray cooling, spray drying (widely used in food, pharmaceutical and personal care products), drug inhalers and disinfection, to give a few examples. The physics and chemistry underlying all these applications is the same, but if manifests itself in different ways and the desired outcome varies between applications. The first challenge addressed by this project is one of measurement: how do you work out what is going on in a droplet that is less than a tenth of a millimetre across and may dry in less than a second? We have already developed sophisticated measurement tools but will need to extend these further. Another challenge is one of modelling: to understand the drying process we need a theoretical framework and computer models to explain - and predict - experimental observations. We will begin looking at the fundamental processes occurring in single drops in air and on a surface and then explore what happens when drops interact or coalesce. This fundamental understanding will be fed into improved models of arrays, clouds or sprays of droplets that are encountered in most practical applications (such as spray coating, spray drying, inhalers or inkjet manufacturing). We will use an Industry Club to engage with companies from a range of different sectors. This Club will provide a forum for sharing problems, ideas and solutions and for disseminating the knowledge generated in the project.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2027Partners:Bayer CropScience (Global), UKCEH, Alphasense Ltd, DHSC, Bayer CropScience (Global) +102 partnersBayer CropScience (Global),UKCEH,Alphasense Ltd,DHSC,Bayer CropScience (Global),Johnson Matthey (United Kingdom),CMCL Innovations (United Kingdom),Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs,Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),MedPharm Ltd,ASTRAZENECA UK LIMITED,PHE,Cn Bio Innovations Limited,Venator,University of Bristol,Trolex Ltd,JM,Nyquist Solutions Ltd,RSK Environmental Ltd,Dept for Env Food & Rural Affairs DEFRA,TH Collaborative Innovation,AstraZeneca (United Kingdom),Intertek Melbourn,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,Chiesi Limited,Aerosol Society of UK and Ireland,JOHNSON MATTHEY PLC,Droplet Measurement Technologies (United States),Syngenta Ltd,Dyson Appliances Ltd,LettUs Grow,Echion Technologies,3M Health Care Ltd,Met Office,Public Health England,Alphasense Ltd,Environment Agency,Emissions Analytics,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,DEFRA,Cambustion (United Kingdom),Agilent Technologies (United Kingdom),Filter Integrity,Biral Ltd,Syngenta (United Kingdom),TH Collaborative Innovation,Biral Ltd,MET OFFICE,Chiesi Limited,LettUs Grow,Melbourn Scientific Limited,NERC CEH (Up to 30.11.2019),3M (United Kingdom),Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),Trolex Ltd,Waters Corporation,Philips Electronics U K Ltd,Bespak Europe Ltd,EA,Steer Energy Solutions Limited,GlaxoSmithKline (United Kingdom),Siemans Limited,Dyson Limited,Pirbright Institute,GSK,TSI Instruments ltd,THE PIRBRIGHT INSTITUTE,Waters Corporation / Micromass U K Ltd,Dept for Env Food & Rural Affairs DEFRA,RSK Environmental Ltd,NanoPharm Ltd.,GlaxoSmithKline PLC,The Pirbright Institute,Echion Technologies,AstraZeneca plc,Nyquist Solutions Ltd,MedPharm (United Kingdom),Philips (United Kingdom),Aerosol Society of UK and Ireland,DMT,Asthma UK,3M Health Care Ltd,National Physical Laboratory,Cambustion,Emissions Analytics,Siemens Limited,TSI Instruments ltd,CMCL Innovations,Venator,Malvern Instruments Ltd,NPL,Defence Science and Technology Laboratory,NanoPharm Ltd.,University of Bristol,Steer Energy Solutions Limited,Spectris (United Kingdom),Met Office,ENVIRONMENT AGENCY,Philips (UK),Filter Integrity,Asthma UK,PUBLIC HEALTH ENGLAND,Malvern Inst,Rolls-Royce Plc (UK),Bayer (Germany),Agilent Technologies (United Kingdom),Bespak Europe LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/S023593/1Funder Contribution: 7,091,920 GBPAn aerosol consists of solid particles or liquid droplets dispersed in a gas phase with sizes spanning from clusters of molecules (nanometres) to rain droplets (millimetres). Aerosol science is a term used to describe our understanding of the collective underlying physical science governing the properties and transformation of aerosols in a broad range of contexts, extending from drug delivery to the lungs to disease transmission, combustion and energy generation, materials processing, environmental science, and the delivery of agricultural and consumer products. Despite the commonality in the physical science core to all of these sectors, doctoral training in aerosol science has been focussed in specific contexts such as inhalation, the environment and materials. Representatives from these diverse sectors have reported that over 90% of their organisations experience difficulty in recruiting to research and technical roles requiring core expertise in aerosol science. Many of these will act as CDT partners and have co-created this bid. We will establish a CDT in Aerosol Science that, for the first time on a global stage, will provide foundational and comprehensive training for doctoral scientists in the core physical science. Not only will this bring coherence to training in aerosol science in the UK, but it will catalyse new collaborations between researchers in different disciplines. Inverting the existing training paradigm will ensure that practitioners of the future have the technical agility and confidence to move between different application contexts, leading to exciting and innovative approaches to address the technological, societal and health challenges in aerosol science. We will assemble a multidisciplinary team of supervisors from the Universities of Bristol, Bath, Cambridge, Hertfordshire, Imperial, Leeds and Manchester, with expertise spanning chemistry, physics, biological sciences, chemical and mechanical engineering, life and medical sciences, pharmacy and pharmacology, and earth and environmental sciences. Such breadth is crucial to provide the broad perspective on aerosol science central to developing researchers able to address the challenges that fall at the boundaries between these disciplines. We will engage with partners from across the industrial, governmental and public sectors, and with the Aerosol Society of the UK and Ireland, to deliver a legacy of training packages and an online training portal for future practitioners. With partners, we have defined the key research competencies in aerosol science necessary for their employees. Partners will provide support through skills-training placements, co-sponsored studentships, and contribution to taught elements. 5 cohorts of 16 doctoral students will follow a period of intensive training in the core concepts of aerosol science with training placements in complementary application areas and with partners. In subsequent years we will continue to build the activity of the cohort through summer schools, workshops and conferences hosted by the Aerosol Society, virtual training and enhanced training activities, and student-led initiatives. The students will acquire a perspective of aerosol science that stretches beyond the artificial boundaries of traditional disciplines, seeing the commonalities in core physical science. A cohort-based approach will provide a national focal point for training, acting as a catalyst to assemble a multi-disciplinary team with the breadth of research activity to provide opportunities for students to undertake research in complementary areas of aerosol science, and a mechanism for delivering the broad academic ingredients necessary for core training in aerosol science. A network of highly-skilled doctoral practitioners in aerosol science will result, capable of addressing the biggest problems and ethical dilemmas of our age, such as healthy ageing, sustainable and safe consumer products, and climate geoengineering.
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