Subcritical water extraction (SWE) is an emerging green and efficient hydrothermal technology, that offers superior performance in active material extraction, scalability, and reduction of harsh process chemicals, in biomass conversion. Regarding biomaterials, traditional isolation methods for cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) are reliant on harsh chemicals (, strong acid), which are expensive with little to no recyclability. This paper explores SWE as a nanotechnology platform to produce CNCs under the principle of "less is more" - by using low content (1 wt%) of phosphoric acid under subcritical conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRedox flow batteries (RFBs) are increasingly being considered for a wide range of energy storage applications, and such devices rely on proton exchange membranes (PEMs) to function. PEMs are high-cost, petroleum-derived polymers that often possess limited durability, variable electrochemical performance, and are linked to discharge of perfluorinated compounds. Alternative PEMs that utilize biobased materials, including lignin and sulfonated lignin (SL), low-cost byproducts of the wood pulping process, have struggled to balance electrochemical performance with dimensional stability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe unholy alliance between the UN and the World Economic Forum in staging a Food Systems Summit is the culmination of deepening public partnerships with the corporate food sector on an international scale. This article examines how the WEF has exploited this relationship to position its private constituency to oversee global food market governance at the expense of multilateral principles, and against China's expanding state-centered model of international self-reliance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article reviews proposals regarding the recent food crisis in the context of a broader, threshold debate on the future of agriculture and food security. While the MDGs have focused on eradicating extreme poverty and hunger, the food crisis pushed the hungry over the one billion mark. There is thus a renewed focus on agricultural development, which pivots on the salience of industrial agriculture (as a supply source) in addressing food security.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper critically assesses the metabolic rift as a social, ecological, and historical concept describing the disruption of natural cycles and processes and ruptures in material human-nature relations under capitalism. As a social concept, the metabolic rift presumes that metabolism is understood in relation to the labour process. This conception, however, privileges the organisation of labour to the exclusion of the practice of labour, which we argue challenges its utility for analysing contemporary socio-environmental crises.
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