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The bio-based plastic market is forecast to grow in the next years. With a growing market share and product range, the implementation of circular thinking is becoming more and more important also for bio-based plastics to enable a sound circular economy for these group of plastics. Therefore, it is important to assess the environmental performance for different end-of-life options of bio-based plastics from an early stage on. This review presents a comprehensive overview on the current status quo of different end-of-life options for bio-based plastics from an environmental perspective. Based on the status quo and the corresponding impact assessment results, the global plastic demand as well as the technical substitution potential of bio-based plastics, the environmental saving potential in case of the different end-of-life options was calculated. The review shows that there is a focus on polylactic acid (PLA) regarding end-of-life assessment, with studies covering all end-of-life options. The focus of the impact assessment has been set on global warming potential (GWP). With respect to GWP, the analysis of a future global potential of PLA showed, for mechanical recycling, the highest saving potential with 94.1 Mio. t CO2-eq. per year in comparison to virgin material.
Digital data on tangible and intangible cultural assets is an essential part of daily life, communication and experience. It has a lasting influence on the perception of cultural identity as well as on the interactions between research, the cultural economy and society. Throughout the last three decades, many cultural heritage institutions have contributed a wealth of digital representations of cultural assets (2D digital reproductions of paintings, sheet music, 3D digital models of sculptures, monuments, rooms, buildings), audio-visual data (music, film, stage performances), and procedural research data such as encoding and annotation formats. The long-term preservation and FAIR availability of research data from the cultural heritage domain is fundamentally important, not only for future academic success in the humanities but also for the cultural identity of individuals and society as a whole. Up to now, no coordinated effort for professional research data management on a national level exists in Germany. NFDI4Culture aims to fill this gap and create a usercentered, research-driven infrastructure that will cover a broad range of research domains from musicology, art history and architecture to performance, theatre, film, and media studies.
The research landscape addressed by the consortium is characterized by strong institutional differentiation. Research units in the consortium's community of interest comprise university institutes, art colleges, academies, galleries, libraries, archives and museums. This diverse landscape is also characterized by an abundance of research objects, methodologies and a great potential for data-driven research. In a unique effort carried out by the applicant and co-applicants of this proposal and ten academic societies, this community is interconnected for the first time through a federated approach that is ideally suited to the needs of the participating researchers. To promote collaboration within the NFDI, to share knowledge and technology and to provide extensive support for its users have been the guiding principles of the consortium from the beginning and will be at the heart of all workflows and decision-making processes. Thanks to these principles, NFDI4Culture has gathered strong support ranging from individual researchers to highlevel cultural heritage organizations such as the UNESCO, the International Council of Museums, the Open Knowledge Foundation and Wikimedia. On this basis, NFDI4Culture will take innovative measures that promote a cultural change towards a more reflective and sustainable handling of research data and at the same time boost qualification and professionalization in data-driven research in the domain of cultural heritage. This will create a long-lasting impact on science, cultural economy and society as a whole.
Das Forschungscluster Energie – Mobilität – Prozesse stellt in acht Beiträgen aktuelle Ergebnisse aus laufenden Forschungsprojekten vor. Es werden Aspekte der Urbanen Logistik, der Automatisierung von Energiemanagementsystemen, der Effizienz von neuen Kältemaschinen, der Entsäuerung von Kulturgütern, der Auslastung von Pedelec-Vermietsystemen und der Reichweite von Elektrofahrzeugen behandelt. Zusätzlich werden relevante Daten in Form von 17 Diagrammen kompakt zusammengestellt.
Das Forschungscluster Smart Data Analytics stellt in dem vorliegenden Band seine Forschung aus den Jahren 2019 und 2020 vor. In der ersten Hälfte des Bandes geben 20 Kurzporträts von laufenden oder kürzlich abgeschlossenen Projekten einen Überblick über die Forschungsthemen im Cluster. Enthalten in den Kurzporträts ist eine vollständige, kommentierte Liste der wissenschaftlichen Veröffentlichungen aus den Jahren 2019 und 2020. In der zweiten Hälfte dieses Bandes geben vier längere Beiträge exemplarisch einen tieferen Einblick in die Forschung des Clusters und behandeln Themen wie Fehlererkennung in Datenbanken, Analyse und Visualisierung von Sicherheitsvorfällen in Netzwerken, Wissensmodellierung und Datenintegration in der Medizin, sowie die Frage ob ein Computerprogramm Urheber eines Kunstwerkes im Sinne des Urheberrechts sein kann.