The Industrial Science Report: How the circular economy is influencing sustainability technology for manufacturing

Industrial sustainability advances with better recycled metals, AI-sorted plastics, clean energy labs, energy-harvesting water systems, and algae carbon capture.
Feb. 6, 2026
9 min read

Key Highlights

  • Recycled metals require strict measurement standards to prevent impurities that can compromise product performance and reliability.
  • AI-powered sorting technologies improve the purity of recycled plastics, enabling their seamless integration into manufacturing supply chains.
  • Investments in applied research facilities support the transition to zero-emission vehicles and clean energy systems.
  • Novel energy-harvesting water purification systems simultaneously produce clean water and hydrogen.
  • Enhancing carbon transfer in algae cultivation can turn emissions into biofuels, offering scalable solutions for industrial carbon management.

Engineering team in Seoul develops energy-harvesting water purification for simultaneous hydrogen production and desalination

Clean water and clean energy are deeply intertwined. In industrial systems, solving one problem often worsens the other. Water purification consumes large amounts of electricity, while many forms of electricity generation depend heavily on water. Researchers at Seoul National University are targeting this challenge by combining desalination and hydrogen production into a single, energy-harvesting system that produces purified water while recovering usable hydrogen energy. If scaled, the approach could turn traditionally energy-intensive utility operations into energy-recovering assets, reshaping how manufacturers and utilities think about resources and energy.

Seoul National University’s College of Engineering research team, led by Professor Sung Jae Kim from the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, has developed an energy-harvesting water purification system that simultaneously produces purified water and hydrogen. The technology removes impurities from saline water while reducing hydrogen ions at the electrode to generate hydrogen gas, integrating desalination and electrolysis into a single process. When electric current is applied across a cation exchange membrane, salt and other contaminants are removed on one of the membranes, producing purified water. On the other side, hydrogen ions receive electrons, producing hydrogen gas. Around 10% of the input electrical energy was recovered as hydrogen energy. Unlike traditional electrodialysis or reverse osmosis systems, the new platform operates without high-pressure pumps and uses a modular membrane structure, promising lightweight, adaptable deployment. The study, supported by the Korea Ministry of Science and ICT (MSIT) and the SNU Energy Initiative (SNUEI), was published in Communications Materials (Nature Portfolio). 

Missouri S&T Ph.D. student developing process to boost algae growth for carbon capture and biofuels

Algae-based carbon capture could offer a way to convert emissions from industrial processes into usable resources, but scaling these systems has been limited by how efficiently carbon dioxide can be delivered to the organisms themselves. Research at Missouri University of Science and Technology addresses this bottleneck by improving carbon transfer within photobioreactors, which is a large tank used to grow algae, potentially making algae a more viable tool for emissions reduction across energy, manufacturing, and wastewater-intensive industries. If successful at scale, this approach transforms carbon management and sustainability standards from a compliance obligation into biofuel production opportunities. 

A Missouri University of Science and Technology mechanical engineering Ph.D. student Alireza Fallahi has developed research using algae to capture industrial emissions. His research improves how carbon dioxide is delivered to algae in photobioreactors. This is a key challenge in scaling algae for industrial use. His work focuses on optimizing a rotating membrane system inside a photobioreactor to more efficiently transfer carbon dioxide from air into water, where algae can absorb it for growth. Using a combination of computer modeling and experimental validation, Fallahi demonstrated that controlled membrane motion can provide a steadier and more effective supply of carbon dioxide, increasing algae growth potential. The research targets applications in industrial emissions capture, biofuel production, and wastewater treatment, where large-scale, cost-effective algae cultivation is critical. Fallahi received a Young Researcher Award for engineering innovation for this work at the 2025 Algae Biomass Summit.

 

About the Author

Anna Townshend

Anna Townshend

managing editor

Anna Townshend has been a journalist and editor for almost 20 years. She joined Control Design and Plant Services as managing editor in June 2020. Previously, for more than 10 years, she was the editor of Marina Dock Age and International Dredging Review. In addition to writing and editing thousands of articles in her career, she has been an active speaker on industry panels and presentations, as well as host for the Tool Belt and Control Intelligence podcasts. Email her at [email protected].

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