EduXchange.EU

Circular Economy for Materials Processing

NGG0401
Entrepreneurship

About this course

Brief description of the course: Students will learn about the whole raw materials value chain, i.e., from exploration, mining, processing, and manufacturing to material recycling and re-use. Students are looking at metals and minerals from a resource efficiency and circular economy perspective. The virtual course materials (presentations, short videos, additional materials) consist of 6 major themes assembled by researchers from 8 European universities. Major themes are:

  1. Business and policy landscape. Circular economy and definitions - UN goals and definition of sustainability, number of environmental legislation, tools to measure sustainability
  2. Materials and available resources (all materials)- interlinked with theme 1. Including different materials and their properties, what they can be used for, and briefly, how they are produced. Also, an overview of critical resources and availability of reserves.
  3. Exploration and impact and mining plus impact (metals and minerals) - production of mining of minerals, where you can find the deposits, and how by-products from mining can be handled.
  4. Processing and re-processing of materials (all) - production processes of steel, non-ferrous metals (zink, copper etc.), and other materials (glass, paper, ceramics, plastics).
  5. Manufacturing (design) and use-phase (all) - includes further processing of materials, design of the product with the use-phase, and end-of-life stage of the products in society.
  6. Recycling and re-use (plastics, ceramics, wood, pulp, and metals) - end-of-life recycling of products and applications. Recycling systems in countries, the EU system (product directives). Waste management facilities and equipment, how are materials sorted, and how much do we recycle.

NB! This course will take place in spring semester 2024/2025 which starts on 3rd of February and ends on 16th of June (you can find that information under Start date section). The real course start and end dates will be announced at the beginning of February at the latest.

Learning outcomes

After completing this course, the student:

  • defines basic concepts of circular economy, describes materials flow (from mining, processing, manufacturing until end-of-life recycling and re-usage), lists issues and drivers for changes;
  • can explain the role and importance of the field in society;
  • recognizes impacts (environmental, economic, and social) of the current practice of materials processing from a sustainability aspect;
  • gets an idea of how to create new business opportunities to re-enter materials into the circular economy.

Examination

Final assessment can consist of one test/assignment or several smaller assignments completed during the whole course. After declaring a course the student can re-sit the exam/assessment once. Assessment can be graded or non-graded. For specific information about the assessment process please get in touch with the contact person of this course. For specific information about grade transfer please contact your home university

Course requirements

None

Resources

  • • Arndt, N. and Ganino, C.: Metals and Society: An Introduction to Economic Geology, Springer, 2012, p. 1-18, ISBN 978-3-642-22996-1
  • • Calatayud, P. and Mohkam, K.: Material Footprint: an indicator reflecting actual consumption of raw materials, General Commission for Sustainable Development, 2018, pp. 1-4, ISSN: 2557-8510
  • • Gertsch, R.E. and Bullock R.L.: Techniques in Underground Mining - Selections from Underground Mining Methods Handbook, Society for Mining, Metallurgy, and Exploration, 1998, pp. 45-86, ISBN: 978-0873351638 etc.
  • • Recommended additional literature is under every theme in virtual lecture materials

Activities

lectures, exercises

Additional information

  • Credits
    ECTS 6
  • Level
    Bachelor
  • Contact hours per week
    4
  • Instructors
    Karin Robam
  • Mode of instruction
    Online - time-independent
If anything remains unclear, please check the FAQ of TalTech (Estonia).

Offering(s)

  • Start date

    3 February 2025

    • Ends
      16 June 2025
    • Term *
      Spring semester 2025
    • Instruction language
      English
    Enrolment period closed
These offerings are valid for students of DTU (Denmark)