Tag Archives: concrete

3 concrete reasons why Street Fighter 6 should release within this 2-month period

Available now… not quite

The clock is ticking ever closer to the impending countdown reaching zero tommorrow night with all signs seemingly pointing to that being the time to see Street Fighter 6 debut to the world, but when will we actually get to play it?

Through our research leading up to the end of the Capcom Pro Tour 2021 Season Final, there are 3 pretty concrete reasons why Street Fighter 6 should release within a very particular 2-month window.

So to have a release date, you need to have obviously a year… and well a date in mind, which all 3 reasons fully support each other on narrowing that all down to at most like a period of 60 days.

The first of them is of course the next Street Fighter’s connection to the Capcom Pro Tour while the other 2 tie back to how Capcom has preferred to announce and release their games over the past 5+ years.

We’ll kick things off with the eSports talk, but for those who are just waiting for the answer… what you’re looking for is January—February 2023.

The Capcom Pro Tour is the longest-running and arguably most prestigious professional fighting game circuit in the entire genre, and the company is showing no signs of stopping or slowing down anytime soon.

Pretty much every investor publication out of Capcom the past few years reaffirms their stance to put even more stock into eSports, and that’ll be doubly true with a hot new game on the horizon.

The way the CPT ties back into narrowing the release window is the consistent time period the events officially begin.

For all of Street Fighter 5’s life, the CPT has kicked off in either March or April, which would of course make SF6’s launch take place sometime before that if they want to keep it going as normal.

If Street Fighter 6 were to reach the hands of players later into the year, it’d push that entire competitive season back or force Capcom to split the year between the old and new games — which I doubt anybody would want.

Although offline events and fighting game majors are still a question mark in 2022, Capcom is likely going to be banking quite a bit on their full return in 2023 to help push their new game and return to more than just online CPT tournaments.

Missing out on the early events like the Final Rounds of the world would also give the spotlight more to their competitors like Bandai Namco, Arc System Works and SNK, and I’m sure they’re looking to avoid all of the potential issues mentioned up above by trying to make sure SF6 is ready to roll shortly after the new year.

We recently looked more into how Capcom’s game reveals actually appear, but what about when they’re chosen to be shown?

To get an accurate release date, you need a year to go with it, so how did we conclude that 2023 is pretty much the only option?

If you look back at Capcom’s big hits of the last 4–5 years like Resident Evil Village, Devil May Cry 5, Monster Hunter Rise, Resident Evil 2 Remake, they’ve all launched less than 1 year after they were first unveiled to the world.

Other companies may have a problem of announcing their games years too early, but that’s not something Capcom’s faced in recent history except for the now-delayed Pragmata.

Working under the continued presumption that Street Fighter 6 is getting revealed tomorrow then, we should expect to see it release sometime before February 20, 2023.

It’s just kinda as simple as that.

Except for Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite, the first 3 months of the year became known for the time for new Capcom fighting games, but that’s expanded to apply for much more of the company now too.

In a similar way to the last reason (but for a different result), a vast majority of Capcom’s newer AAA titles (including the aforementioned DMC5, RE2, MHR and also Monster Hunter: World) have all released before the end of March in their respective years.

That’s because it’s all part of the first quarter of the year, but more importantly, January—March is the fourth and final quarter of the fiscal year for Capcom.

The simplest reason as for why that’s so important for them is because those big games make their end of year financials look even better than they would otherwise.

This theoretically drives profits and stocks higher as a result, which in turn gives Capcom more money to work with on their next projects.

It just makes business sense that Street Fighter 6, like Street Fighter 5 before it, will be aiming heavily for that fourth fiscal quarter because the series is still Capcom’s third best-seller of all time.

The aforementioned reasons though likely preclude SF6 from a March release window, so January or February it is.

Developing large video games is a volatile process, especially right now, so there is still the off chance that Street Fighter will need to be pushed back beyond their goal though delays out of Capcom have been fairly rare in recent years too.

We may not be left waiting to know much longer to know when the next Street Fighter will be in our hands, considering the countdown is set to end mere hours from now.

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Noblewoman’s tomb reveals new secrets of ancient Rome’s highly durable concrete

Enlarge / The Tomb of Caecilia Metella is a mausoleum located just outside Rome at the three mile marker of the Via Appia.

Among the many popular tourist sites in Rome is an impressive 2000-year-old mausoleum along the Via Appia known as the Tomb of Caecilia Metella, a noblewoman who lived in the first century CE. Lord Byron was among those who marveled at the structure, even referencing it in his epic poem Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage  (1812-1818). Now scientists have analyzed samples of the ancient concrete used to build the tomb, describing their findings in a paper published in October in the Journal of the American Ceramic Society.

“The construction of this very innovative and robust monument and landmark on the Via Appia Antica indicates that [Caecilia Metella] was held in high respect,” said co-author Marie Jackson, a geophysicist at the University of Utah.  “And the concrete fabric 2,050 years later reflects a strong and resilient presence.”

Like today’s Portland cement (a basic ingredient of modern concrete), ancient Roman concrete was basically a mix of a semi-liquid mortar and aggregate. Portland cement is typically made by heating limestone and clay (as well as sandstone, ash, chalk, and iron) in a kiln. The resulting clinker is then ground into a fine powder, with just a touch of added gypsum—the better to achieve a smooth, flat surface. But the aggregate used to make Roman concrete was made up fist-size pieces of stone or bricks

In his treatise de Architectura (circa 30 CE), the Roman architect and engineer Vitruvius wrote about how to build concrete walls for funerary structures that could endure for a long time without falling into ruins. He recommended the walls be at least two feet thick, made of either “squared red stone or of brick or lava laid in courses.”  The brick or volcanic rock aggregate should be bound with mortar comprised of hydrated lime and porous fragments of glass and crystals from volcanic eruptions (known as volcanic tephra).

Enlarge / Portus Cosanus pier, Orbetello, Italy. A 2017 study found that the formation of crystals in the concrete used to build the sea walls helped prevent cracks from forming.

Jackson has been studying the unusual properties of ancient Roman concrete for many years. For instance, she and several colleagues have analyzed the mortar used in the concrete that makes up the Markets of Trajan, built between 100 and 110 CE (likely the world’s oldest shopping mall). They were particularly interested in the “glue” used in the material’s binding phase: a calcium-aluminum-silicate-hydrate (C-A-S-H), augmented with crystals of stratlingite. They found that the stratlingite crystals blocked the formation and spread of microcracks in the mortar, which could have led to larger fractures in the structures.

In 2017, Jackson co-authored a paper analyzing the concrete form the ruins of sea walls along Italy’s Mediterranean coast, which have stood for two millennia despite the harsh marine environment. The constant salt-water waves crashing against the walls would have long ago reduced modern concrete walls to rubble, but the Roman sea walls seem to have actually gotten stronger.

Jackson and her colleagues found that the secret to that longevity was a special recipe, involving a combination of rare crystals and a porous mineral. Specifically, exposure to sea water generated chemical reactions inside the concrete, causing aluminum tobermorite crystals to form out of phillipsite, a common mineral found in volcanic ash. The crystals bound to the rocks, once again preventing the formation and propagation of cracks that would have otherwise weakened the structures.

So naturally Jackson was intrigued by the Tomb of Caecilia Metella, widely considered to be one of the best-preserved monuments on the Appian Way. Jackson visited the tomb back in June 2006, when she took small samples of the mortar for analysis. Despite the day of her visit being quite warm, she recalled that once inside the sepulchral corridor, the air was very cool and moist. “The atmosphere was very tranquil, except for the fluttering of pigeons in the open center of the circular structure,” Jackson said.

Enlarge / A plaque on the tomb reads “To Caecilia Metella, daughter of Quintus Creticus, [and wife] of Crassus”.

Carole Raddato/CC BY-SA 2.0

Almost nothing is known about Caecilia Metella, the noblewoman whose remains were once interred in the tomb, other than that she was the daughter of a Roman consul, Quintus Caecilius Metellus Creticus. She married Marcus Licinius Crassus, whose father (of the same name) was part of the First Triumvirate, along with Julius Caesar and Pompey the Great. It was likely her son—also named Marcus Licinius Crassus, because why make it easy for historians to keep track of the family genealogy?—who ordered the construction of the mausoleum, likely built sometimes between 30 and 10 BCE.

A marble sarcophagus housed in Palazzo Farnese is supposedly from the Tomb of Caecilia Metella, but it was probably not the noblewoman’s since it dates to between 180 and 190 CE.  Besides, cremation was a more common burial custom at the time of the lady’s demise, and thus historians believe that the tomb’s cella probably once held a funerary urn, rather than some kind of sarcophagus.

It’s the structure of the the tomb itself that is of most interest to scientists like Jackson and her colleagues. The mausoleum is perched atop a hill. There is a cylindrical rotunda atop a square podium, with an attached castle to the rear that was built sometime in the 14th century. The exterior bears a plaque with the inscription, “To Caecilia Metella, daughter of Quintus Creticus [and wife] of Crassus.”

Enlarge / Lava overlying volcanic tephra in the substructure of the tomb.

Marie Jackson

The foundation is built partly on tuff rock (volcanic ash that has been compacted under pressure) and lava rock from an ancient flow that once covered the area some 260,000 years ago. The podium and rotunda are both comprised of several layers of thick concrete, surrounded by travertine blocks as a frame while the concrete layers formed and hardened. The tower walls are 24 feet thick. Originally there would have been a conical earthen mound on top, but it was later replaced with medieval battlements.

To take a closer look at the tomb mortar’s microstructure, Jackson teamed up with MIT colleagues Linda Seymour and Admir Masic, as well as Lawrence Berkeley Lab’s Nobumichi Tamura. Tamura analyzed the samples at the Advanced Light Source, which helped them identify both the many different minerals contained in the samples and their orientation. The ALS beam line produces powerful x-ray beams about the size of a micron, which can penetrate through the entire thickness of the samples, per Tamura. The team also imaged the samples with scanning electron microscopy.

They discovered that the tomb’s mortar was similar to that used in the walls of the Markets of Trajan: volcanic tephra from the Pozzolane Rosse pyroclastic flow, binding together large chunks of brick and lava aggregate. However, the tephra used in the tomb’s mortar contained much more potassium-rich leucite. Over the centuries, rainwater and groundwater seeped through the tomb’s walls, which dissolved the leucite and released the potassium. This would be a disaster in modern concrete, producing micro-cracking and serious deterioration of the structure.

That obviously didn’t happen with the tomb. But why? Jackson et al. determined that the potassium in the mortar dissolved in turn and effectively reconfigured the C-A-S-H binding phase. Some parts remained intact even after over 2000 years, while other areas looked more wispy and showed some signs of splitting. In fact, the structure somewhat resembled that of nanocrystals.

Enlarge / Scanning electron microscope image of the tomb mortar.

Marie Jackson

“It turns out that the interfacial zones in the ancient Roman concrete of the tomb of Caecilia Metella are constantly evolving through long-term remodeling,” said Masic. “These remodeling processes reinforce interfacial zones and potentially contribute to improved mechanical performance and resistance to failure of the ancient material.”

The more scientists learn about the precise combination of minerals and compounds used in Roman concrete, the closer we get to being able to reproduce those qualities in today’s concrete—such as finding an appropriate substitute (like coal fly ash) for the extremely rare volcanic rock the Romans used. This could reduce the energy emission of producing concrete by as much as 85 percent, and improve significantly on the lifespan of modern concrete structures.

“Focusing on designing modern concretes with constantly reinforcing interfacial zones might provide us with yet another strategy to improve the durability of modern construction materials,” said Masic. “Doing this through the integration of time-proven ‘Roman wisdom’ provides a sustainable strategy that could improve the longevity of our modern solutions by orders of magnitude.”

DOI: Journal of the American Ceramic Society, 2021. 10.1111/jace.18133  (About DOIs).

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Made-from-CO2 concrete, lululemons and diamonds spark investor excitement

Oct 4 (Reuters) – What do diamonds, sunglasses, high-end lululemon sportswear and concrete have to do with climate change?

They can all be made using carbon dioxide (CO2), locking up the planet warming gas. And tech startups behind these transformations are grabbing investor attention.

Some use bacteria. Some use proteins. Some use chemical processes to speed natural reactions. Most pull apart the carbon and the oxygen in CO2 to create another chemical that is used to make consumers goods.

Companies in the area raised over $800 million so far this year, more than tripling from 2020, according to a Reuters review of data from PitchBook, Circular Carbon Network, Cleantech Group and Climate Tech VC.

Reuters Graphics

“I don’t want to call it a green tax, but our consumers who really do care … have demonstrated that they’re willing to pay a bit of a premium,” said Ryan Shearman, chief executiveof Aether Diamonds, which grows diamonds in the lab using captured CO2.
On the opposite end of the glamour spectrum, the concrete industry, green also is good for marketing, said Robert Niven, CEO of CarbonCure Technologies, which makes technology that injects CO2 into fresh concrete, and strengthens it by locking in the carbon.

“About 90% of our uptake has been from independent concrete producers large and small that are just looking for that competitive edge.”

The world needs to capture and store 10 billion tonnes of CO2 annually by midcentury to slow climate change, according to United Nations estimates, a scale the companies can only dream of, when current carbon capture pilots often are at scales of hundreds and thousands of tonnes.

Humans produce greenhouse gases that are the equivalent of around 50 billion tonnes of CO2 each year, and governments will gather in Scotland in late October and November for a U.N. climate conference on cutting emissions.

All fossil-based products that could use recycled CO2 instead account for some 6.8 billion tonnes of emissions, according to a Columbia University report in May, although lead author Amar Bhardwaj said trying to swap out all of that “would be a misuse of CO2 recycling,” since there are cheaper ways to reduce carbon emissions.

Nicholas Flanders, co-founder of Twelve, which uses chemical processes to reuse CO2, says recycling is better than storing captured CO2 underground. “We’re developing a technology that can go toe to toe with fossil fuels” without additional financial incentives to remove carbon.

That is because many consumers are attracted by “green” labels.

lululemon athletica inc (LULU.O) says it has created a polyester yarn from carbon emissions with LanzaTech that will be used for future products. LanzaTech, which has raised the most funds of companies in the space, according to Reuters’ review, creates ethanol using bacteria. Ethanol is turned into ethylene which is used to make everything from plastic bottles to polyester.

CEO Jennifer Holmgren said LanzaTech’s ethanol is more expensive than corn based ethanol, but customers looking to source greener products are buying.

The biggest investment in the space this year, more than $350 million, was into Houston-based Solugen, which feeds CO2 and other ingredients to enzymes that make chemicals for stronger cement, water pipe coating and other products.

Its products are already cheaper than those made from fossil fuels, said CEO Gaurab Chakrabarti. Still, it is not sourcing CO2 captured from factory emissions or from the air, which Chakrabarti described as “an option.”

Capturing CO2 is a less enticing prospect for many investors, who think the government should fund such expensive, high risk projects.

However, Nicholas Moore Eisenberger, managing partner at Pure Energy Partners, has invested in direct air capture firm Global Thermostat and sees opportunity in necessity and believes once the projects scale up, they will be cheaper.

“The science tells us that we have under a decade to start to bend the curve on climate, and that is now within the investment time frame of most venture and private equity investors,” said Eisenberger.

Reporting By Jane Lanhee Lee and Nia Williams; editing by Peter Henderson and Marguerita Choy

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Martian Colonists Could Use Their Own Blood to Produce Concrete

AstroCrete—a concrete-like substance made partly from human blood.
Image: The University of Manchester

Provocative new research suggests the blood of astronauts, when mixed with Martian soil, can produce a durable concrete-like substance. Incredibly, other human bodily fluids were shown to make this biocomposite even stronger.

The first colonists to arrive on Mars will need to build shelters and spaces for work, but the Red Planet isn’t exactly bustling with hardware stores and material suppliers.

Ideally, the colonists could use some of the stuff that’s right there on Mars, such as regolith (soil), rocks, and water, the latter of which is sparse and hard to reach. Trouble is, these on-site resources don’t magically combine to produce viable construction materials.

Of course, we could always ship a bunch of bricks to Mars, but that presents a ridiculously expensive proposition. Estimates suggest that it would cost upwards of $2 million to transport a single brick to the Red Planet, which, yeah, that’s not going to happen.

A 3D-printed version of the biocomposite.
Image: The University of Manchester

New research published in Materials Today Bio could potentially come to the rescue. The needed resources to produce a concrete-like substance could come directly from the colonists themselves, in the form of blood, sweat, tears, and urine, according to the study, co-authored by chemist Nigel Scrutton from the University of Manchester.

“Scientists have been trying to develop viable technologies to produce concrete-like materials on the surface of Mars, but we never stopped to think that the answer might be inside us all along,” Aled Roberts, also from the University of Manchester, said in a statement.

In tests, the researchers demonstrated that the human serum albumin (HSA)—a common protein found in blood plasma—can act as a binder when combined with simulated Martian and lunar regolith. AstroCrete, as they’re calling it, proved to be as tough as concrete and in some cases even tougher.

This idea didn’t come from thin air, as animal blood and other animal parts have historically been used to produce building materials, such as binders and glue. The ancient Romans, for example, used animal blood when making concrete. The researchers suspect the process of denaturation, or the curdling, of blood as being responsible for AstroCrete’s bonding power.

In tests, the blood-based binder produced a concrete-like substance with compressive strengths reaching 25 Megapascals (MPa), which is comparable to ordinary concrete. Subsequent tests with the addition of urea—a biological waste product found in urine, sweat, and tears—further increased the compressive strength by 300%. The best combination of HSA and urea resulted in a compressive strength of 40 MPa, which is considerably stronger than normal concrete. Importantly, the team performed these tests on simulated Martian regolith; the real thing may not respond exactly in this way.

The scientists propose that AstroCrete could be used as an aggregate material to fill sandbags or to make heat-fused bricks. To get the required amounts of HSA, the crew would have to donate their blood twice a week. According to the paper, a two-year mission involving six colonists could allow for the production of 1,100 pounds (500 kg) of the high-strength version of AstroCrete. Should each crew member chip in with their blood and urine, the colony would have enough material to double the available housing over the two-year span, setting the stage for future newcomers.

An advantage of AstroCrete is that, unlike “other proposed binder materials, HSA production does not require any additional synthesis technology such as bioreactors or synthetic polymer/resin production equipment—which would add additional mass (and therefore expense) to a Martian mission, as well as increase energy-, water- and workload-demand, and also be susceptible to component failure,” according to the study. What’s more, the team showed that the biocomposite can be 3D printed.

As a relevant aside, the team considered other on-site human resources, such as nails, hair, dead skin cells, mucus, and poop. On the matter of poop, the team cited previous research showing that it’s not possible to make knives from frozen poop—a study that earned those scientists an Ig Nobel prize. Given that temperatures on Mars can get as low as -81 degrees F (-63 degrees C), Scrutton and his colleagues toyed with the idea of “frozen or desiccated faeces-based tools.” But as the researchers write in their study, “due to health and safety concerns, we were unable to explore human faeces-based [extraterrestrial regolith biocomposites] in this study.” Shame. But that sounds like a good idea for a future experiment.

The new paper is really neat, but the scientists still need to demonstrate their process with true Martian regolith, as well as show that their process and biocomposite material will work under Martian conditions. What’s more, they’ll have to show that the regular extraction of blood from the crew members is safe. New techniques for producing building materials on Mars could arise in the coming years, perhaps making this blood-curdling idea obsolete.

More: Missions to Mars shouldn’t exceed four years due to radiation risks, scientists say.

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North Carolina woman’s remains found entombed in concrete in the basement of her own home

A 70-year-old woman’s remains were found in her basement entombed in concrete earlier this month and police are now searching for her live-in caretaker in connection with the homicide. 

Lynn Gay Keene’s family filed a missing person report on July 30, about six weeks after they last heard from her on June 14. 

Officers from the Avery County Sheriff’s Office went to her home in Linville Falls, North Carolina, and discovered that Keene’s 2000 Lincoln Town car was missing. Three days later on Aug. 2, the Cherokee Police Department found Keene’s car abandoned about 100 miles southwest of her home. 

Lynn Gay Keene, 70, was found entombed in concrete in the basement of her North Carolina home. 
(Avery County Sheriff’s Office)

TEXAS MURDER SUSPECTS ARRESTED FOR DEATH OF 60-YEAR-OLD WOMAN HELPING COUPLE MOVE INTO NEW HOME

The Avery County Sheriff’s Office and the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation then got a search warrant for Keene’s home and made the grim discovery. 

“During the search detectives and SBI agents found human remains entombed in concrete in the basement of the home,” a spokesman for the Avery County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement. “An autopsy was performed on the human remains that were located and it was determined through dental records that the remains were that of Ms. Keene. The autopsy also concluded that the cause of death was a homicide and that Keene did not die of natural causes.”

Elizabeth Freeman, the 53-year-old former caretaker who may be going by the name Elizabeth Carserino, is now wanted for charges of larceny of a motor vehicle, financial card theft, and identity theft. 

She may be in Dorchester County, South Carolina, or Cummings, Georgia, because she has family in both those areas, according to police. 

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John Thompson, Keen’s neighbor and family friend, said, according to WXIA that the whole community is in disbelief. 

“I never would have imagined this would have happened. Not here. And not to her,” Thompson told the local news outlet. “We just all remember seeing her certain days, and then started asking like, oh, it’s been a while since we’ve actually seen her.”

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Egypt says concrete wall will protect resort of Sharm el-Sheikh

(CNN) — Egypt says a recently constructed 36-kilometer concrete and wire barrier encircling Sharm el-Sheikh will help protect tourism at the Red Sea resort on the southern tip of the Sinai peninsula.

Authorities in southern Sinai hope to revitalize tourism, which has been dented by upheaval after Egypt’s 2011 uprising, the crash of a Russian passenger jet in Sinai in 2015 and the coronavirus pandemic. In 2005, bombings in Sharm el-Sheikh killed dozens in one of Egypt’s deadliest militant attacks.

The security barrier is made of concrete slabs with stretches of wire fencing separating the resort from the desert around it. Some of the slabs are marked with black peace symbols.

Those entering the city by road have to pass through one of four gates equipped with cameras and scanners.

A police guard at the Ruwaysat entrance of the security cement barrier built around the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt on February 6, 2021.

Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters

Sharm el-Sheikh is about 360 km (224 miles) south of Sinai’s northern, Mediterranean coast, where an insurgency by Islamist militants has been concentrated.

“The distance between them is huge, plus there is great security with Egypt’s Second Army securing the North Sinai, and the Third Army securing South Sinai,” South Sinai Governor Khaled Fouda told journalists on a tour of the area at the weekend.

“They will be searched, security cameras will identify them, vehicles will go through a scan, so that when they arrive in the city, it’ll be after a full search operation.”

A museum housing ancient Egyptian artifacts opened in Sharm el-Sheikh last year amid efforts to diversify tourism activities at the beach resort. A university named after Saudi Arabia’s King Salman has also opened recently in the city.

Before the coronavirus pandemic, Sharm el-Sheikh often hosted international summits attended by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.

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