Monday, November 27, 2023

 

Police to trial new forensic footwear process


Forensic experts are taking new steps to identify criminals caught on CCTV using the shoes they are wearing.


Business Announcement

STAFFORDSHIRE UNIVERSITY

The new method uses 3D scanning to identify criminal's footwear 

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THE NEW METHOD USES 3D SCANNING TO IDENTIFY CRIMINAL'S FOOTWEAR

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CREDIT: STAFFORDSHIRE UNIVERSITY




Forensic experts are taking new steps to identify criminals caught on CCTV using the shoes they are wearing.

Staffordshire University and West Yorkshire Police have teamed up to develop a new system which uses 3D scanning technology to help identify the type of footwear worn by criminals.

While the analysis of footwear impressions left at crime scenes is an established practice in policing, this new approach focuses on the upper part of the shoe to link offenders to a crime.

Claire Gwinnett, Professor of Forensic and Environmental Science, said: “The number of cases in which footage from body worn cameras, CCTV and even phones is used to catch perpetrators has increased. However, criminals often conceal their face and wear dark clothing which means there are few identifying features apart from their shoes.

“The big questions is, how can you identify these shoes and how useful is this as evidence?”

Funded by the Police STAR Fund, the team have devised a fast, effective, and affordable method for capturing data from footwear uppers by creating an interactive 3D image of a shoe under both visible light and infrared light.

“Most CCTV cameras use near infrared light during nighttime recordings, which can make the footwear look completely different than in natural light,” Professor Gwinnett commented. “So, it was important to develop a method that will help police to quickly identify the type of shoe, how common it is, and importantly what it looks like under different lighting conditions.”

Postdoctoral researcher Dr Megan Needham has been trialing the method which uses a photography light box, turntable and camera. She explained: “3D scans, rather than still images, enable users to align the 3D model to the angle of the shoe captured on a CCTV camera.

“We record a video of a shoe on the turntable under each lighting condition, extract the frames and put it into software that stitches it all together to make a 3D model. The idea is that you can set it up and leave it to record then come back when it has finished.”

She added: “It is a quick and simple process, taking around 30 minutes in total. The equipment needed for this process costs less than £500. The aim is for this method to be used by footwear units across the nation, and in the future detention officers in a custody suite to scan a suspect’s shoe.”

Megan is currently refining the optimum settings for the process before it is piloted by different police forces in the new year. In future, it is hoped that this method could be adopted to populate a national database of footwear uppers which could be accessed by police professionals across the country.

Selina Reidy, an Identification Expert from West Yorkshire Police, said: “With the increasing quantity and improving quality of surveillance footage, we are receiving a growing number of requests to identify the make and model of footwear caught on camera. Having access to a searchable database of interactive, 3D models of footwear under both white and near infrared light will greatly improve the accuracy and efficiency of the current process. This work will expand and improve the current evidence base and, with continued development, will provide an additional forensic capability that informs police investigations.”    

Staffordshire University will host a workshop for police professionals about the research in March 2023. For further information please contact megan.needham2@staffs.ac.uk.

 

Making a difference, belonging drives rural festival volunteers and bolsters community development

Peer-Reviewed Publication

IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY

SoJung Lee, associate professor in Iowa State University’s Department of Apparel, Events and Hospitality Management and director of graduate education for hospitality management and the Club Research Lab. 

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SOJUNG LEE, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR IN IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY’S DEPARTMENT OF APPAREL, EVENTS AND HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT.

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CREDIT: CHRISTOPHER GANNON/IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY

AMES, Iowa — During Orange City’s three-day tulip festival each May, the northwest Iowa town attracts roughly 40,000 visitors, more than six times its population. People come for the blooms and parades, traditional Dutch food and musical theater. For the community, it’s an opportunity to celebrate its cultural heritage and give a boost to local businesses.

Volunteers are essential to the festival’s success, as they are for many rural celebrations across the Midwest. But not a lot of research has examined their motivations. To help fill this gap, researchers surveyed hundreds of volunteers from 12 festivals — including Orange City’s — across Iowa, Michigan and Kansas. All of the festivals were based in communities with 1,000 to 35,000 residents and centered on the arts, culture or film.

SoJung Lee led the study. The associate professor in Iowa State University’s Department of Apparel, Events and Hospitality Management researches rural and sustainable tourism, pop culture tourism and country clubs. She also directs graduate education for hospitality management and the Club Research Lab at Iowa State. Co-authors include Linda Niehm, professor and interim department chair of AESHM, whose expertise includes rural retailing and small family businesses; associate professor MiRan Kim at Michigan State University; and associate professor Jichul Jang at Kansas State University.

"Festivals have become significant drivers of economic development that benefit rural communities, but they depend on volunteers who give up their time,” says Lee. “In this study, we wanted to better understand their motivations and focused on psychological ownership. How important is it for volunteers, and how does it affect community involvement and support?”

In their paper, the researchers break psychological ownership into four parts: self-efficacy, accountability, belongingness and self-identity. Self-efficacy relates to an individual’s confidence that they can make a difference. Accountability is the likelihood that someone would speak up if something wasn’t done correctly or if the event or organization was criticized. Belongingness refers to feeling included while self-identity is the idea that someone’s success or identity is connected to the event.

On-site and online survey results from 373 participants indicate people are more likely to volunteer and support community development if they have a strong sense of psychological ownership. This is bolstered when they perceive an event as personally important and relevant, feel needed and find social connection with other volunteers and attendees.

The researchers say tapping into these values can help attract and retain volunteers in the long run. They recommend reaching out to community members before planning a festival or event to gauge interest. Once in motion, festival planners and organizers should find ways to engage volunteers, perhaps by giving them opportunities to make decisions or take on leadership roles. Organizing social events for volunteers can help them build relationships and feel appreciated, as well.

In addition to analyzing motivations, the researchers looked at demographic data provided by the survey participants and how much they volunteered:

  • 82% of the volunteers were local residents
  • 75% were women
  • 80% were over 40 years old; 58 was the average age
  • 55% were employed; 40% were retired; 5% were unemployed or full-time students
  • 53% volunteered between one to four hours per day at the festival; the rest volunteered five or more hours per day
  • 45% of people volunteered at the festival between one and five years; 22% had volunteered between six and ten years; 33% had volunteered for 11 or more years
  • More than 90% had some college or higher education degrees
  • Average household income was $75,000

The researchers say the high percentage of women and average age align with other studies about rural volunteerism and community engagement.

In the paper, they emphasize their findings offer “practical implications [that] will be useful to not only festival organizers but also economic and community developers, Extension program specialists, business consultants, and others who provide support to rural towns and their residents.”

“As we visited these festivals, we could really see that they brought out a lot of community pride and economic support. Often, generations of families came back for these events. These festivals can add a lot to communities, including the optimism and mindset of the people who live there,” says Niehm.

“Volunteers are direct resources to communities. Taking care of them by providing enough breaks and food, being open to their input, showing appreciation and fostering social connections can have larger ripple effects on community development and growth,” adds Lee.

The co-authors say future research could explore trends by surveying volunteers at the same festivals over a long period of time. Different settings, urban vs. rural, and other factors, like the size of the event and cultural background, could be studied as well.

Funding for this study came from the North Central Regional Center for Rural Development.

Rural festivals that participated:

  • Adel Sweet Corn Festival, IA    
  • Celebrate Freedom in Wamego, KS  
  • Clay County Fair, IA    
  • Columbus Day Festival, KS    
  • Great Akron Scarecrow Festival, IA 
  • Orange City Tulip Festival, IA 
  • Kalona Fall Festival, IA    
  • Marshalltown Art Festival, IA    
  • Mount Vernon-Lisbon Community, IA   
  • Traverses City Film Festival, MI
  • Tulip Time Festival, MI  
  • Wamego Tulip Festival, KS

 

WVU researchers aim to cut through radio interference that obscures signal detection


Grant and Award Announcement

WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY

GreenBankTelescope 

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WVU RESEARCHERS ARE DEVELOPING WAYS TO REMOVE HUMAN-MADE RADIO INTERFERENCE THAT CAN BLOCK THE DETECTION OF RADIO SIGNALS BY ASTRONOMERS AT PLACES LIKE THE GREEN BANK OBSERVATORY IN POCAHONTAS COUNTY. 

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CREDIT: (WVU PHOTO)




West Virginia University research team is working on ways to eliminate the rampant human-made radio interference from cell phones, televisions and radar systems that can block the detection of radio signals by astronomers.

With $510,000 in funding support from the National Science Foundation, team members will develop new algorithms and hardware with potentially broad applications.

“As radio astronomy instruments continue to become more sophisticated, human-made signals need to be removed in real time before the information from the sky is reduced for astronomical interpretation,” said Kevin Bandura, associate professor of computer science and electrical engineering

New methods driven by the project’s results will be made freely available to the astronomical community and could also be used in other fields such as radar imaging, satellite communication, sound navigation ranging and other sensor applications. Although each of the mentioned imaging modalities relies upon different sensory environments, new interference detection methods will be easily generalizable to those fields, said Natalia Schmid, professor at the WVU Benjamin M. Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources, who is leading the effort.

The study will likely play a hand in helping detect fast radio bursts, which were co-discovered by Duncan Lorimer, professor of physics and astronomy, who is working with Schmid and Bandura on the project.

“Radio telescopes are powerful tools to explore the cosmos,” Lorimer said. “They allow for the detection of extremely weak galactic signals and the study of the radio transient sky, including fast radio bursts — enigmatic objects of unknown origin that can probe the large-scale structure of the universe.”

Due to the transient nature of fast radio bursts, removing radio interference is vital for survey sensitivity as it can prevent astronomers from observing parts of the universe.

Schmid, Lorimer and Bandura outlined a three-pronged approach to the project. The team will:

     •     research and develop innovative and efficient, real-time radio frequency interference detection, characterization and flagging signal processing techniques through statistics and theoretical measures,

     •     develop hardware prototyping of new RFI detection and characterization algorithms, and

     •     develop metrics of performance tailored to different astronomical observation cases pertinent to scientific occurrences.

The project will also involve graduate and undergraduate students at WVU.

“Projects will be developed which focus on the design and implementation of new statistical and information theoretical tests for the detection of RFI in radio astronomy data,” Schmid said.

These will become part of the existing “Stochastic Systems Theory” and “Digital Signal Processing for Radio Astronomy” graduate courses, as well as supplement undergraduate classes in “Signals and Systems.”

“The course material will be designed to make this technology more accessible to a wide audience and help train the next generation of scientists and engineers,” Schmid said.

Undergraduate students will participate in the research activities through this project and programs such as the Research Apprenticeship Program and the Summer Undergraduate Research Experience.

This project is jointly funded by the Division of Astronomical Sciences and the Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research. The estimated end date is fall 2026.

Algorithms, firmware and software developed will be made available for use to the world radio astronomy community through GitHub, a cloud-based platform utilized through summer RFI workshops at the Green Bank Observatory and disseminated through programs run by the NSF’s SpectrumX Center.

“The success of this work will be measured not only by our development of the proposed algorithms, but by their adoption, successful use and expansion by the broader international astronomical community,” Bandura said.

 

Newborn babies have natural affinity for ‘the beat’


Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITEIT VAN AMSTERDAM

Baby 

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BABY

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CREDIT: ISTVÁN WINKLER




Newborn babies can perceive the beat in music, new research has confirmed. The study, carried out by a team of scientists from the University of Amsterdam and the HUN-REN Research Centre for Natural Sciences (TTK) in Hungary, shows that this ability to recognise a beat is not simply due to the statistical learning ability of newborns, but that beat perception is actually a separate cognitive mechanism that is already active at birth. The study was published on 27 November in the scientific journal Cognition.

‘There is still a lot we don't know about how newborn babies perceive, remember and process music,’ says author Henkjan Honing, professor of Music Cognition at the UvA. 'But, in 2009, we found clear indications that babies of just a few days old have the ability to hear a regular pulse in music – the beat – a characteristic that is considered essential for making and appreciating music.’
 

27 babies
Because the previous research from Honing and his colleagues had so far remained unreplicated and they still had many questions, the UvA and TTK joined forces once again – this time using a new paradigm. In an experiment with 27 newborn babies, researchers manipulated the timing of drum rhythms to see whether babies make a distinction between learning the order of sounds in a drum rhythm (statistical learning) and being able to recognise a beat (beat-induction).

Manipulated timing
The babies were presented with two versions of one drum rhythm through headphones. In the first version, the timing was isochronous: the distance between the sounds was always the same. This allows you to hear a pulse or beat in the rhythm. In the other version, the same drum pattern was presented, but with random timing (jittered). As a result, beat perception was not possible, but the sequence of sounds could be learned. This allowed the researchers to distinguish between beat perception and statistical learning.

Because behavioural responses in newborn babies cannot be observed, the research was done with brain wave measurements (EEG) while the babies were sleeping. This way, the researchers were able to view the brain responses of the babies. These responses showed that the babies heard the beat when the time interval between the beats was always the same. But when the researchers played the same pattern at irregular time intervals, the babies didn't hear a beat.

Not a trivial skill
‘This crucial difference confirms that being able to hear the beat is innate and not simply the result of learned sound sequences,’ said co-author István Winkler, professor at the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology at TTK. 'Our findings suggest that it is a specific skill of newborns and make clear how important baby and nursery rhymes are for the auditory development of young children. More insight into early perception is of great importance for learning more about infant cognition and the role that musical skills may play in early development.'

Honing adds: 'Most people can easily pick up the beat in music and judge whether the music is getting faster or slower – it seems like an inconsequential skill. However, since perceiving regularity in music is what allows us to dance and make music together, it is not a trivial phenomenon. In fact, beat perception can be considered a fundamental human trait that must have played a crucial role in the evolution of our capacity for music.’

 

Advances in characterization and evaluation of oil shale based on terahertz spectroscopy


Researchers from China University of Petroleum (Beijing) offer a holistic insight into applying terahertz spectroscopy to characterize oil shale


Peer-Reviewed Publication

ENERGY REVIEWS

Terahertz spectroscopy for exploring oil shale 

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RESEARCHERS COMPREHENSIVELY REVIEW THE APPLICATION OF TERAHERTZ SPECTROSCOPY FOR THE CHARACTERIZATION AND EVALUATION OF OIL SHALE

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CREDIT: KUN ZHAO FROM CHINA UNIVERSITY OF PETROLEUM (BEIJING)




The current understanding of the oil generation potential of oil shale and the dynamic process of organic matter pyrolysis is still unclear, leading to the relatively slow progress in its development technology. Due to the characteristics such as fingerprint property, low energy, penetration, and broadband, terahertz (THz) spectroscopy as an emerging evaluation method in the field of oil and gas resources has demonstrated research and application value in multiple aspects. “These include THz dating, THz exploration, crude oil identification, crude oil emulsion demulsification process, pattern transitions of oil-water two-phase flow, disaggregation of crude oil in a magnetic field, PM2.5 monitoring, and grading,” explains Professor Kun Zhao, who works at the Beijing Key Laboratory of Optical Detection Technology for Oil and Gas at the China University of Petroleum (Beijing), China.

 

To meet the requirements of new theories and methods for efficient utilization of oil shale resources, Prof. Zhao and his “oil and gas optics” team from China University of Petroleum (Beijing), China, recently reviewed the advances and challenges in THz spectroscopy for the evaluation of oil shale. Their findings were made available online on 16 August 2023 and will be published in Volume 2, Issue 4 of Energy Reviews in December 2023. In the review article, the team summarizes the applications of THz spectroscopy in characterizing anisotropy, organic distribution, fingerprint spectrum of kerogen, oil yield, pyrolysis process, and THz wave absorption of oil shale. In addition, they propose the potential pathway for THz technology, considering oil shale’s actual development in future.

 

Taking advantage of the features of THz wave, a new concept of thermal THz analysis was developed to rediscover the pyrolysis model of kerogen. “The most important discovery of THz wave exploration is that the main oil generation zone and natural gas zone can be characterized simultaneously using THz spectroscopy, which is difficult to achieve using other standard methods,” points out Prof. Zhao.

 

The characteristic absorption peak of kerogen in the THz range provides a new insight into the research of kerogen in the micro and nano scale. The researchers also realized direct evaluation of the oil yield without pyrolysis due to the strong dependence of the anisotropic THz parameters on the oil yield to avoid environmental pollution.

 

“Although the important progress of THz wave characterization of oil shale has been achieved, the research breadth and depth are still lacking, and many challenges need to be solved,” highlights Prof. Zhao. As for practical application, in situ conversion is an inevitable trend for large-scale commercial development of oil shale in the future. It is expected for THz spectroscopy to monitor the downhole cracking process of oil shale and productivity of oil and gas in real-time.

 

“THz wave is expected to become a sharp edge to overcome the bottleneck problem of oil shale exploitation after some specific problems are addressed, such as high-power light source, high sensitivity detection, fast scanning and imaging, micro-nano THz device, and strong environmental adaptability,” concludes Prof. Zhao.

 

***

 

Reference

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enrev.2023.100041

Authors: Xuecong Liua,c,d, Kun Zhaob,c,d,*, Xinyang Miaob,c,d, Honglei Zhanb,c,d

Affiliations:            

aCollege of Information Science and Technology, China University of Petroleum

bCollege of New Energy and Materials, China University of Petroleum

cBeijing Key Laboratory of Optical Detection Technology for Oil and Gas, China University of Petroleum

dKey Laboratory of Oil and Gas Terahertz Spectroscopy and Photoelectric Detection, Petroleum and Chemical Industry Federation, China University of Petroleum

 

*Corresponding author email id: zhk@cup.edu.cn

 

About Professor Kun Zhao from China University of Petroleum (Beijing)

Dr. Kun Zhao currently works as a Professor at the Beijing Key Laboratory of Optical Detection Technology for Oil and Gas at the China University of Petroleum (Beijing), China. He received his B.S. degree in magnetic materials from Nanjing University, China, in 1992, M.S. degree in condensed matter physics from the Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China, in 1994, and the Ph.D. degree in thin-film physics from The Chinese University of Hong Kong, China, in 2001. His research interests include oil and gas optics technology, mineral functional materials, and quantum exploration. He has published over 400 international journal papers and several book chapters.

 

About Energy Reviews

Energy Reviews is an international, interdisciplinary, high-quality, open-access academic journal in the field of energy, which is sponsored by Shenzhen University and published by the Elsevier publishing group. Energy Reviews invites high-quality reviews at the forefront of research in a broad range of topics covering not only materials, chemistry, and engineering, but also new energy devices, applications, methods, tools, theories, policy and management. The following areas will be prioritized, but not exclusively:

1. New theories, methods, and technologies for energy research

2. Interdisciplinary research of materials, physics, chemistry, and biology in energy

3. Low-carbon utilization of fossil fuel and CCUS

4. Advanced hydrogen, renewable energy, and energy storage technologies

5. Exploration and applications of novel energy conversion

6. Applications of AI, big data in energy

Website: https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/energy-reviews

 

New method verifies carbon capture in concrete


Confirming CO2 origins could be useful for emissions trading


Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF TOKYO

Counting carbon. 

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CARBON EMISSIONS FROM BURNING FOSSIL FUELS CONTAINS VERY LITTLE CARBON-14 (14C) BECAUSE IT HAS DECAYED SO MUCH OVER TIME. THIS MAKES CARBON-14 VERY USEFUL FOR TRACING CARBON EMISSIONS FROM NATURAL COMPARED TO HUMAN SOURCES.

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CREDIT: 2023, IPPEI MARUYAMA




Carbon capture is essential to reduce the impact of human carbon dioxide emissions on our climate. Researchers at the University of Tokyo and Nagoya University in Japan have developed a method to confirm whether carbon in concrete originates from the raw materials, or from carbon in the air which has been trapped when it reacts with the concrete to form the mineral calcium carbonate. By measuring the ratio of certain carbon isotopes in concrete that had been exposed to the air and concrete that hadn’t, the team could successfully verify that direct air carbon capture had occurred.  This method could be useful for the industrial sector and countries looking to offset their carbon emissions.

2023 is on the way to becoming the hottest year on record. Rice crops wilted in Japan and roads melted in the U.S. Despite international agreements and calls to action, greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels have continued to increase. If we are to prevent the planet from tipping over the critical threshold of a 2-degree-Celsius temperature rise by 2100 (compared to preindustrial levels), we need to do more. According to the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, reducing and preventing further emissions alone is not enough. We must also remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere if we are to hit our target.

Direct air capture (DAC) pulls carbon dioxide from the air using chemicals or physical processes. Increasing the use of DAC technologies is part of the International Energy Agency’s (IEA) net-zero emissions scenario, a proposed range of methods to enable the global energy sector to remove as much carbon dioxide (CO2) as it emits by 2050. According to the IEA, industry was responsible for a quarter of global energy system CO2 emissions in 2022. Cement is the second-most widely used industrial product (after water), and it comes with a high environmental burden. 

“As much as 800 kilograms of CO2 is emitted per ton of cement during its production, so reducing emissions has become a significant issue in the concrete industry,” explained Professor Ippei Maruyama from the Department of Architecture at the University of Tokyo Graduate School of Engineering. “Concrete has long been known to react with CO2 in the air to form calcium carbonate, an undesirable phenomenon because it induces corrosion of the steel bars inside concrete structures. However, the concrete industry is now considering ways to make effective use of this reaction.”

Although problematic for construction, the reaction which causes calcium carbonate to form fixes or traps CO2, removing the gas from the atmosphere. Calcium carbonate is also found naturally in rocks, such as limestone, which are used in concrete manufacturing. “This makes it difficult to distinguish whether or not COidentified in concrete has been freshly extracted from the air or comes from rocks,” said Maruyama. “So we developed a method to verify this, which could be used to determine whether the concrete produced can be certified as offsetting CO2 emissions.”

Researchers carried out the study by making hydrated cement paste samples as a concrete replica. After getting sufficiently hydrated, they ground the paste sample into powder, keeping the nonexposed powder contained and leaving the exposed powder open to the air. After seven and 28 days, they dissolved the powder in acid to collect the gas and using a technique called accelerator mass spectrometry analyzed the ratio of several carbon isotopes (atoms with the same chemical properties but different physical properties), namely carbon-12, carbon-13 and carbon-14. This enabled the team to evaluate where the carbon came from, and whether it was already present in the raw materials, as the carbon ratios reflected the known proportion of carbon isotopes in the air at the time the gas was sealed. 

Next the researchers want to apply this lab-based method to real-world locations and test how the varied quantities of raw materials used in local concrete production may affect results. “Fixing carbon dioxide from the air is certified as an act of offsetting CO2 emissions, so it is economically valuable in terms of emissions trading. Digging up calcium carbonate for use in concrete is not, so the distinction is very important and this research can help to support a healthy market,” said Maruyama. “We believe that the carbon neutrality and a circular economy in the construction industry are essential to our future, particularly in Japan where this industry has a role in supporting business continuity and recovery from natural disasters.”

 

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Paper Title:

Zhenzhen Wang, Abudushalamu Aili, Masayo Minami and Ippei Maruyama. Verification method of Direct Air Capture by Cementitious Material Using Carbon Isotopes. Journal of Advanced Concrete Technology Vol. 21, 934-941 Nov 2023. doi: 10.3151/jact.21.934

Funding:

This article is based on results from a project, JPNP21023, by the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO).

Useful Links
Graduate School of Engineering: https://www.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp/en/soe

Building Material Engineering Lab: https://bme.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp/eng/

Journal paper: https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jact/21/11/21_934/_article/-char/en

 

Research Contact:

Professor Ippei Maruyama

Graduate School Engineering, The University of Tokyo

Hongo 7-3-1, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-8654

Email: i.maruyama@bme.arch.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp

Tel.: +81-30-5841-6196

 

Press contact:
Mrs. Nicola Burghall
Public Relations Group, The University of Tokyo,
7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-8654, Japan
press-releases.adm@gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp

About the University of Tokyo
The University of Tokyo is Japan's leading university and one of the world's top research universities. The vast research output of some 6,000 researchers is published in the world's top journals across the arts and sciences. Our vibrant student body of around 15,000 undergraduate and 15,000 graduate students includes over 4,000 international students. Find out more at www.u-tokyo.ac.jp/en/ or follow us on Twitter at @UTokyo_News_en.