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Fabiano Piccinno

Researcher at University of Zurich

Publications -  6
Citations -  1589

Fabiano Piccinno is an academic researcher from University of Zurich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Process (engineering) & Product design. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications receiving 1253 citations. Previous affiliations of Fabiano Piccinno include Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology & University of St. Gallen.

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Industrial production quantities and uses of ten engineered nanomaterials in Europe and the world

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provided worldwide and Europe-wide estimates for the production and use of ten different engineered nanomaterials (TiO2, ZnO, FeO, AlO�, AlOႷ ₷႔, AlÕ€ Á€ À Á À à ǫ, Alǫ Á à À , SiO2, CeO 2, Ag, QDs, CNT, and fullerenes.
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From laboratory to industrial scale: a scale-up framework for chemical processes in life cycle assessment studies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a framework that helps to scale up chemical production processes for LCA studies when only data from laboratory experiments are available, focusing on heated liquid phase batch reactions, identified and simplified the most important calculations for the reaction step's energy use as well as for certain purification and isolation steps.
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Predicting the environmental impact of a future nanocellulose production at industrial scale: Application of the life cycle assessment scale-up framework

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a scale-up framework for chemical processes which is applied in this paper to evaluate the impact of nanocellulose yarn production on the environment.
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Life Cycle Assessment of a New Technology To Extract, Functionalize and Orient Cellulose Nanofibers from Food Waste

TL;DR: A laboratory-scale life cycle assessment (LCA) to assess the various routes of the entire production process from an environmental perspective indicates that the electrospinning process has a higher impact than the alternative wet spinning process under the conditions described.
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Multi-perspective application selection: a method to identify sustainable applications for new materials using the example of cellulose nanofiber reinforced composites

TL;DR: The Multi-Perspective Application Selection (MPAS) as mentioned in this paper is a method to support researchers and industrial practitioners alike in identifying and choosing the most promising and sustainable applications for new materials under development.