GreenCentre`s scale-up capacity drawing US chemists CSChE
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GreenCentre`s scale-up capacity drawing US chemists CSChE
Canada's top stories in the chemical sciences and engineering | Chemical News CATALYST DISTRIBUTION GreenCentre’s scale-up capacity drawing US chemists Paul Chirak, a Princeton University researcher specializing in catalysts for new methods of chemical synthesis, has turned to GreenCentre Canada for help in commercializing products he has been developing. GreenCentre, an organization based in Kingston, Ont., was established to assist Canadian academics with this kind of work, but Princeton’s interest in this same kind of service reveals that it meets a need that is not being addressed in the United States. “You’d think with all the resources and all the people in the US that this would be something that exists,” says Andrew Pasternak, GreenCentre’s Director of Commercialization and Business Development. “But it’s pretty clear that it doesn’t — GreenCentre is unique in this respect.” Through an agreement with the Princeton University Office of Technology Licensing, GreenCentre Canada will apply its commercial and technical expertise, access to industrial networks and laboratory facilities to accelerate the progress of Chirak’s catalysts to make them ready for market. “GreenCentre is very pleased to have the opportunity to work with the high level of researchers at Princeton University and assist them in getting their catalysts to be used by industry,” GreenCentre executive director Pete Pigott said in a formal announcement on the deal. “These technologies being developed at Princeton have the potential to offer real sustainable solutions to the fine chemical industry.” GreenCentre was recently renewed as part of the federal government’s Centres of Excellence for Commercialization and Research program to continue this work with members of the academic community as well as build similar bridges with entrepreneurs and larger enterprises in the chemical sector. Among other activities, the organization’s Kingston facilities offer researchers the ability to scale up the output of their laboratory efforts from a matter of milligrams or millilitres to the kilogram or kilolitre amounts necessary for potential industrial partners to take stock of its commercial potential. According to Pasternak, an even more important role for GreenCentre is putting researchers in touch with their counterparts in the private sector. “The hard part is finding the correct technical people in industry who make the decisions for catalysts, who can use it and try it,” he says. In this respect, establishing such a network for Chirak also represents a much larger opportunity for GreenCentre, which will now be conducting this process in a much wider setting. “When we’re promoting these catalysts that come from the US, we get to know who the players are in the US and globally,” says Pasternak. “That knowledge is invaluable. The more catalysts we bring in, the more people get exposed to GreenCentre. That can help GreenCentre in all its catalyst distribution efforts, no matter where it comes from. REGULATIONS CSChE backs new process safety management standard The Canadian Society for Chemical Engineering (CSChE) has successfully turned the Process Safety Management Standard (PSM) it developed three years ago into the Canadian Standards Association’s first national standard. The achievement addresses a need in Canada, which is one of the few Western countries without prescriptive legislation and regulations. “Process Safety Management is the application of management principles and systems to the identification, understanding and control of process hazards to prevent process-related injuries and accidents — that’s the starting definition,” says University of Toronto chemical engineer Graeme Norval, who chaired the project group that undertook the initiative earlier this year. Norval says that the group was made up of a diversity of people who brought the perspectives of their various industries and government departments to these deliberations, so that the language and meaning of the resulting standard would be as universally applicable as possible. For example, the condition “loss of containment” could mean a pipeline leak to the operator of a chemical plant or a rock collapse in the shaft of a mining site. “You have to understand all the process hazards and the process risks,” Norval says. “It’s a performance-based standard so it’s smaller than the CSChE standard in terms of length. But it’s very precise in what the elements are that you need to have.” The financial cost to CSChE for developing the CSA standard was $140,000, an amount that was successfully supported by companies, industry trade associations and government departments. The final product was sent out for a public review that wrapped up in October and the resulting feedback will be incorporated over the new few months. Norval estimates that the new standard should be in place by this March or April of 2016. www.cheminst.ca/magazine November/December 2015 19