The development of the recycling system is based on the special industry knowledge of Performance Chemicals and Keil Anlagenbau. The recycling system developed by Keil Anlagenbau and Performance Chemicals sets new standards in terms of efficiency gains and delivers unprecedented advantages in industrial use. The process efficiency and recyclate quality are the key factors in recycling technology. Of course, Keil Anlagenbau and its revolutionary recycling system for polyurethanes will not be missing. Our customers can already subject their recyclables to this process on a specially designed pilot plant and apply the result on an industrial scale.
In close consultation with customers and partners, we have systematically developed the chemistry and process technology together with our engineers and found new solutions. In addition, the chemistry and equipment can be precisely adapted to customer-specific requirements, feedstocks and application scenarios. Process temperatures well below 180☌ and high throughput rates make polyurethane recycling an economic success story. The process efficiency and recyclate quality are key factors in recycling technology. The precision of the images, coupled with a sense of something uncanny and sinister nagging at the edges made me think of DeLillo in his prime, a mixture of clarity and disorientating fuzziness perfectly matched to the heat haze of the setting.Keil Anlagenbau with its revolutionary recycling system for polyurethanes will of course not be missing. “Dubious though it may be to plug another book from your own publisher, can I be excused for once to recommend Chris Keil’s ‘ Flirting at the Funeral’ to you? Smart, tense, and mysterious, this is a wonderfully evocative and unsettling read. This is the hugely talented Alan Bilton, author of ‘ The Known and Unknown Sea’ talking about ‘Flirting at the Funeral’ Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a reply WORKING SPACE Sorry we can’t be more helpful, they said. Today, the space-ship Dawn is orbiting the pocked and blobby face of the dwarf planet Ceres, but nobody at JPL would even speculate about Shalamov. I could have written a postscript to the book, picturing an exile more cold and terrible than Kolyma, where the ruins of the camps are choking in snow, the wooden huts scoured as white as bones. Is it the size of a potato or a grain of sand? A cathedral, or a kitchen table? I wanted to form an image of this object, circling the sun in the main belt between Jupiter and Mars I wanted to know if it was cratered by impacts or worn smooth by time and distance, like a piece of glass in the sea. They’ve plotted its orbit, but they say that nothing is known about its size, shape, mass, or composition. They knew, obviously, that it had been discovered in 1977 by the Soviet astronomer Nikolai Chernykh, and is named after the author of Kolyma Tales.
The Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena couldn’t tell me much about the asteroid 3408 Shalamov that I didn’t already know. From The Ghostwriter’s Notebook Copyright © Chris Keil 2015