38 research outputs found

    Thermoelectric properties of lead chalcogenide core-shell nanostructures

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    We present the full thermoelectric characterization of nanostructured bulk PbTe and PbTe-PbSe samples fabricated from colloidal core-shell nanoparticles followed by spark plasma sintering. An unusually large thermopower is found in both materials, and the possibility of energy filtering as opposed to grain boundary scattering as an explanation is discussed. A decreased Debye temperature and an increased molar specific heat are in accordance with recent predictions for nanostructured materials. On the basis of these results we propose suitable core-shell material combinations for future thermoelectric materials of large electric conductivities in combination with an increased thermopower by energy filtering.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure

    Redefining innovation processes: The digital designers at work

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    As design in digital innovation has become a thing, we highlight the inconclusive concepts that describe design activity in innovation processes. Proposing an alternative theoretical lens - a sociomaterial practice lens - we claim that this view can reveal the contribution of digital designers to the work of innovation. This paper draws on a research study with digital designers in the UK. At the same time as we begin to reconceptualise the ways digital design activity can be described, we also illustrate a theoretical framework based on 1) action and knowing as ordered by collectively produced objects, 2) sociomateriality and the configuration of human bodies and materials in action, 3) the co-emergence of objects and sociomaterial configurations where each is the condition of the other. This alternative way of looking at design activity may pose some challenges to the theoretical traditions in the field. We however believe that it contains immense potential too

    Assessing sustainability in housing LED urban regeneration : insights from a housing association in Northern England

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    How far do current assessment methods allow the thorough evaluation of sustainable urban regeneration? Would it be useful, to approach the evaluation of the environmental and social impacts of housing regeneration schemes, by making both hidden pitfalls and potentials explicit, and budgeting costs and benefits in the stakeholders’ perspective? The paper aims at answering these questions, by focusing on a case study located in the Manchester area, the City West Housing Trust, a nonprofit housing association. Drawing from extensive fieldwork and including several interviews with key experts from this housing association, the paper first attempts to monetize the environmental and social value of two extant projects – a high-rise housing estate and an environmentally-led program. It then discusses whether and how a stakeholder-oriented approach would allow more engagement of both current and potential funders in the projects at hand. Findings from both the literature and the empirical data that was gathered show how in current housing regeneration processes, room for significant improvements in terms of assessment methods still exist. Findings additionally show that the environmental and social spillovers are largely disregarded because of a gap in the evaluation tools. This may also hinder the potential contributions of further funders in the achievements of higher impacts in terms of sustainability

    Socially Sustainable Manufacturing: Exploring the European Landscape

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    Sustainable manufacturing has been extensively researched in the last decades, however there is a lack of coherence in literature specifically addressing its social dimension. Within the framework of the Social Sustainability-themed project SO SMART (Socially Sustainable Manufacturing for the Factories of the Future), a preliminary explorative survey and interview study were deployed among manufacturing companies and their stakeholders in Europe to investigate the extent to which they understand and practice social sustainability in relation to their business activities and context. Using an inquiry approach based on the main concepts related to social sustainability found in literature, this paper reports findings on preliminary exploration of the European landscape of social sustainability-related practices from a corporate and societal perspective. Findings contribute to the creation of a basis of shared knowledge as a prerequisite for extending and further developing concepts and models for socially sustainable manufacturing ecosystems

    Big data to support Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

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    This paper discusses the importance of research design and indicators’ selection to facilitate the assessment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). From this perspective, it feeds the discussion on the need of relevant indicators for monitoring SDGs. It provides a starting point of what can be done to strengthen the scientific underpinning of sustainability indicators. It leverages on findings of authors’ previous empirical studies on SDG indicators and composite indexes. These studies call for some shifts in the SGDs agenda in order to avoid the great risk to misallocate development investments. The first shift derives from the incompatibilities of some SGDs indicators. In particular, trade-offs occur across SDGs: progress on one the economic pillar cannot fully offset lack of progress on another (e.g. rising environmental degradation). This misalignment can be explained referring to the level of analysis of sustainability: part of the problem is that sustainability cannot be addressed solely at the national level as complex interactions among political and governmental levels in complex nested subsystems affect it. This implies a reframing of the SDG framework and a conceptualization of it at a local level to make it more locally relevant. Thus, the paper discusses the potential of big data (spatial information inherent in earth observational data, satellite data, mobile and social media data, etc.) to supplement traditional indicator
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