Cradle-to-gate life cycle inventory of vancomycin hydrochloride

2010 ◽  
Vol 408 (6) ◽  
pp. 1331-1337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Celia Ponder ◽  
Michael Overcash
2013 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 153-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joan-Manuel F. Mendoza ◽  
Maria Feced ◽  
Gumersindo Feijoo ◽  
Alejandro Josa ◽  
Xavier Gabarrell ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 1051 ◽  
pp. 721-724
Author(s):  
Yu Rong Zhang ◽  
Ming Hui Liu ◽  
Yuan Feng Wang

Life cycle inventory (LCI) involves creating an inventory of flows from and to nature for a product system, which is a prerequisite of life cycle assessment (LCA). This paper conducts a comparative analysis of available inventories of cement produced in China and points out the reliability of these inventory results. 1 ton cement was chosen to be the functional unit, and the system boundary was defined from cradle to gate. In the process of cement production, many pollutants will be emitted, so only the four main emissions (CO2, NOX, SO2 and dust) are considered. The analysis showed that the reliability of cement inventories is affected by inaccurate or non-representative data, and all results are difficult to compare due to the varying system boundaries.


2013 ◽  
Vol 54 ◽  
pp. 244-252 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara González-García ◽  
Inga Krowas ◽  
Gero Becker ◽  
Gumersindo Feijoo ◽  
María Teresa Moreira

2004 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 114-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Conceptión Jiménez-González ◽  
Alan D. Curzons ◽  
David J. C. Constable ◽  
Virginia L. Cunningham

Author(s):  
Alejandra Gomez-Campos ◽  
Claire Vialle ◽  
Antoine Rouilly ◽  
Caroline Sablayrolles ◽  
Lorie Hamelin

Flax fiber appears as a suitable feedstock in the endeavor of deploying a sustainable biobased economy. Its environmental performance as reinforcement in composite materials has been studied in previous Life Cycle Assessments (LCAs). However, these studies only present a coarse Life cycle Inventory (LCI) and often fail to detail all processes of the supply chain or to represent the co-products. This paper aims to bridge this gap and provide data for future LCAs on flax fiber production and transformation.The study focuses on the impacts of producing a bio-based reinforcement material (a fabric product for non-aesthetic purposes) with a system expansion perspective. The functional unit is defined as the production of 2400 m² flax-based technical textile per year, this corresponds to one hectare of cultivated land. The geographical scope considers that the production occurs in France and that some manufacturing process are outsourced in China. A Sensitivity Analysis was carried out to assess the influence of the electricity mix in the various countries involved in the manufacturing cycle.A detailed life cycle inventory for flax fiber production and transformation was built and the environmental performance of a flax technical textile was assessed as a cradle-to-gate LCA. The fate of co-products was documented and was shown to contribute to the reduction of the generated environmental impacts. Through a cradle-to-gate LCA, a broader understanding of the environmental performance of a flax-based technical textile was presented by including the valorization of co-products and a wider set of analyzed impact categories, going therefore beyond the existing state-of-the-art. Results show agricultural activities and electricity production to be the biggest contributors to the environmental impacts of flax technical textile; contributions due to land use changes were minor in comparison. Very specifically for this case study, a sensibility analysis showed the influence of an all-French production to be more efficient from an environmental point of view.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kilian Fricke ◽  
Sascha Gierlings ◽  
Philipp Ganser ◽  
Martin Seimann ◽  
Thomas Bergs

Abstract The aviation industry has been growing continuously over the past decades. Despite the current Covid-19 crisis, this trend is likely to resume in the near future. On an international level, initiatives like the Green Recovery Plan promoted by the European Union set the basis towards a more environmentally friendly future approach for the aero-industry. The increasing air traffic and the focus on a more sustainable industry as a whole lead to an extensive need for a more balanced assessment of a products life cycle especially on an ecological level. Blisks (or IBRs) remain a central component of every current and very possible every future aero engine configuration. Their advantages during operation compared to conventional compressor rotors are met with a considerably complex manufacturing and production process. In the high-pressure compressor segment of an engine, the material selection is limited to Titanium alloys such as Ti6Al4V and heat-resistant Nickel-alloys such as Inconel718. The corresponding process chains consist of numerous different process steps starting with the initial raw material extraction and ending with the quality assurance (cradle to gate). Especially the central milling process requires a highly qualified process design to ensure a part of sufficient quality. Life-Cycle-Assessments enable an investigation of a products overall environmental impact and ecological footprint throughout its distinct life-cycle. Formal LCAs are generally divided by international standards into four separate steps of analysis: the goal and scope definition, the acquisition of Life Cycle-Inventory, the Life-Cycle-Impact-Assessment and the interpretation. This content of this paper focuses on a general approach for Life-Cycle-Assessment for Blisk manufacturing. • Firstly, the goal and scope is set by presenting three separate process chain scenarios for Blisk manufacturing, which mainly differ in terms of raw material selection and individual process selections for blade manufacturing. • Secondly, the LCI data (Life-Cycle Inventory) acquisition is illustrated by defining all significant in- and outputs of each individual process step. • Thirdly, the approach of a Life-Cycle-Impact-Assessment is presented by introducing the modelling approach in an LCA-software environment. • Fourthly, an outlook and discussion on relevant impact-indicators for a subsequent interpretation of future results are conducted.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Greg Cooney ◽  
James Littlefield ◽  
Joe Marriott ◽  
Matt Jamieson ◽  
Robert E James III PhD ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 100060
Author(s):  
Sheldon A. Blaauw ◽  
James W. Maina ◽  
Louis J. Grobler

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