Powder and Bulk Engineering

PBEI0317

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PBEI | March 2017 5 G e n t l e C l e a n R e l i a b l e C o n v e y i n g Z-Conveyor Cablevey is a registered trademark of Intraco, Inc. 1/2016 (641) 673-8451 www.cablevey.com (641) 673-8451 www.cablevey.com Cablevey is a registered trademark of Intraco, Inc. 02/2017 • Low Decibels – Quiet! • Minimal Footprint • Starts & Stops Under Load • Dust-Free Enclosed System • Low Maintenance • Energy-efficient • Clean-in-Place Options Decades of Global Experience 45 65 900 30,000 World-Wide Experts in Cable Conveying Solutions Years in Business Countries Served Products Moved Installations lets throughout Romania. According to PPG Industries, the acquisition will help the company's position in the region and complement the operation's current loca- tions in Poland, Czech Republic, Hun- gary, and Slovakia. PPG Industries, Pittsburgh, supplies paints, coatings, fi- berglass, and specialty materials to indus- trial and various other markets. Primetals, Midrex begins operations at Texas HBI plant LONDON, England — Primetals Technologies Ltd. and consortium part- ner Midrex Technologies Inc. officially have begun production at a newly con- structed hot briquetted iron (HBI) facil- ity near Corpus Christi, TX USA. The plant will produce almost 2 million met- ric tons of HBI annually, making it the largest single module of this type in the world, according to Primetals Technolo- gies. The companies received an HBI order in Europe in 2013, which made construction of the Corpus Christi facility necessary. Primetals Technologies, Lon- don, is a joint venture of Siemens, Mitsub- ishi Heavy Industries, and Partners Communications. Midrex Technologies, a supplier for the direct reduction of iron, is headquartered in Charlotte, NC USA. Oerlikon acquires Citim, plans powder production facility PFÄFFIKON, Switzerland — Oer- likon has announced its acquisition of Citim GmbH, a service provider that de- signs and produces metal additive manu- facturing (AM) components. Oerlikon, a global technology company with focus on surface solutions, advanced materials, and materials processing, says that the acquisi- tion will expand its AM technology and service portfolio with established 3D print- ing capabilities in Europe and the USA. Currently, Oerlikon offers metal powders for AM. When combined with Citim's ca- pabilities, Oerlikon can provide an end-to- end service concept for AM. Citim, Barleben, Germany, originally began as a spin-off of Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg, which first focused on proto- type tooling. The company now has about 120 employees and serves customers in the aerospace, energy, medical, and automo- tive industries. Höganäs to collaborate on energy reuse from metal powder production plants HÖGANÄS, Sweden — Höganäs AB, a Swedish metal powder producer, announced that it will collaborate with a local energy supplier, WA3RM AB to reuse residual heat and carbon dioxide from Höganäs' metal powder produc- tion plants in tomato cultivation, fish farming, and as electricity. The partner- ship aims to not only improve the envi- ronment, but also to make a profit for local businesses and create jobs. Höganäs had been collaborating with local energy supplier Höganäs Energi, but the company produces more residual heat than can be used by the energy supplier. The cooperation with WA3RM is part of a program called Regenerative Industrial Devel- opment, in which WA3RM will buy heat and carbon dioxide from Höganäs that isn't suitable for district heating and use it for other businesses. The businesses will be located as close to the Höganäs' plants as possible, with planned crop and fish production to begin within 3 years. Toray Industries, Mitsui Sugar joint venture to demonstrate new manufacturing process TOKYO, Japan — Toray Industries has announced a joint venture with Mit- sui Sugar Co. Ltd. has been created to seek business opportunities for manufacturing systems that produce cellulosic sugar, a raw material used for producing various biochemical products, from the surplus bagasse generated at sugar mills. The joint venture called Cellulosic Biomass Technology Co. Ltd. will be located in Bangkok, Thailand, and the goal is to produce high-quality, low-cost cellulosic sugar from inedible biomass while saving 50 percent of the energy typically used in manufacturing by using water treatment membranes in the process. The new demonstration would help to make chemical products from inedible biomass. The project will be carried out in Thailand under the International Energy Conservation Technology and System

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