Thursday, November 17, 2011

Brazil will produce fuel from sewage sludge

By Waldirene Biernath


Brazil will import from Germany a manufacturing process of clean fuel - without emitting greenhouse gases - which uses sewage as raw material.

Google image
The process consists in tranform the gases  on renewable  
Compressed Natural Gas.
The process transforms the gases generated in the decomposition of sewage sludge on biomethane, a kind of renewable Compressed Natural Gas (CNG), unlike petroleum derivative.

The system will be deployed in a treatment plant of Sabesp (Basic Sanitation Company of São Paulo) in Franca City (400 km from the capital) and should start operating in March, 2012, even on a trial basis.

The new fuel is already used in organizational fleets (public and private) in Europe for a decade.

Budgeted at R$ 6 million, the project is developed in partnership with the Fraunhofer Foundation. Germany will transfer U.S. $ 5.1 million and Sabesp afford $ 900 thousand.

The Sabesp technological innovation superintendent, Américo Sampaio de Oliveira, said the plant to be installed in Franca will produce 1,900 m³ of biomethane per day.

Each m3 of gas equals one gallon of gasoline and, therefore, the daily volume for the planned unit corresponds to 10% of all fuel used today by 5,057 vehicles in the fleet in the State of Sabesp.

"This initial production can reduce CO2 emissions by up to 16 tons per year," said Sampaio.

Initially, however, the new fuel will be used in 49 company cars.

If the experiment succeeds, biomethane can be adopted for the entire fleet of Sabesp.

MORE TESTS

First, it will take three years of study on the feasibility and logistics for distribution in the state.

Although produced from sewage sludge, biomethane has not the typical bad smell of sewage.

This is because the manufacturing process filters out H2S (hydrogen sulfide), responsible for the odor of rotten eggs and can corrode the engine.

It also removed from the gas siloxanes, substances that form crust that can block small pipes of the machine.


Vocabulary:
greenhouse: of or relating to or caused by the greenhouse effect;
sewage (noun): waste substances, especially waste from people’s bodies, removed from houses and other buildings by a system of large underground pipes called sewers;
sludge (noun): a thick soft substance that remains when liquid has been removed from something in an industrial process;
raw material (noun):  material suitable for manufacture or use or finishing;
fleets (noun): a group of vehicles, planes, boats, or trains, especially when they are owned by one organization or person;
plant (noun): a factory that produces power, or processes chemicals, etc;
pipe (noun): a tube that carries liquid or gas from one place to another.



Source:

Friday, November 11, 2011

Engineering in São Carlos is the most disputed course at USP

By Waldirene Biernath
Source: Google images
USP Campus in São Carlos
The Fuvest (Fundação Universitária para o Vestibular) has announced the ratio of applicants to places to the 2012 entrance exam, which will select students for USP (Universidade de São Paulo) and to the Medical Sciences Faculty of São Paulo’ Santa Casa.
The civil engineering entrance exam at USP in São Carlos is the most disputed. The course has 52.27 candidates applying for each one of its 60 places - 3,136 candidates in total.
The second most disputed course is medicine, with 51.18 candidates for each one of its 275 places. There are in total 14,074 candidates. Advertising and Marketing is in the third place, with the ratio of 47.2 candidates/place.
In total, 146,892 people enrolled in the Fuvest 2012 entrance exam. Candidates apply for 10,852 places at USP and one hundred places for Medical Sciences Faculty of Santa Casa.
Of the total number of candidates, 51,661 are applying for places of courses in the humanities, 40,221 for biological and 36,211 for exact areas.