Northumbria College has obtained a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA) Fellowship price over 1 / 4 million euros to analysis low-carbon, 3D-printed building supplies. The venture will probably be led by Dr. Keerthan Poologanathan alongside different engineering school members, with postdoctoral researcher Dr. Jyotirmoy Mishra becoming a member of the group. Their work will concentrate on growing geopolymer-based building supplies utilizing agricultural and industrial waste to cut back environmental impression.


The analysis goals to create 3D printable geopolymer mortars that use different alkaline activators derived from waste merchandise. These supplies would exchange Portland cement, which is carbon-intensive and generally utilized in 3D-printed building at this time. The group will look at numerous properties of those supplies together with setting time, workability, energy, and long-term sturdiness.
Dr. Mishra acknowledged: “I’m actually honoured to obtain the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellowship and to affix Northumbria’s world-class Affiliate Professor Keerthan Poologanathan and his analysis group. This venture permits me to contribute to cutting-edge innovation in sustainable building by integrating materials science, structural engineering, and digital manufacturing.”
Dr. Poologanathan commented on the importance of the analysis: “The MSCA Fellowship is a recognition of the Northumbria’s analysis excellence and reinforces our place as a hub for superior, interdisciplinary work in sustainable engineering. 3D-printed concrete is the way forward for sustainable building – this analysis will assist to cut back carbon emissions, reduce materials prices, and minimise waste, whereas enhancing the energy and sturdiness of recent infrastructure.”
The venture builds on Northumbria’s current work in civil and structural engineering. Final yr, the college enhanced its capabilities by putting in new 3D building printing know-how by partnerships with producer Luyten 3D and sustainable know-how firm ChangeMaker 3D. This tools is housed in Northumbria’s Buildings Laboratory.
Supply: newsroom.northumbria.ac.uk