Modular Hydrogel Reactors for Sustainable Horticulture: A Peat Alternative

A forward-looking startup is using cross-sector open innovation to support its work in driving low carbon horticulture. Specifically, the company is looking for a solution provider to design, manufacture, and deploy a pilot-scale hydrogel reactor system. The reactor will need to be able to mix bioreagents, fertilisers, antimicrobial agents and water in a heated reaction vessel, with the capacity to subsequently pour the product into a mould.

Opportunity

Challenge opens

08/04/2024

Challenge closes

10/05/2024

Benefit

The Net Zero Catalyst Fund is an Innovate UK Innovation Exchange (iX) competition which makes available grant funding for a series of Net Zero iX challenges (up to £25,000 per challenge partnership). Please note that, in accordance with the iX process, all funding will be directed to solution providers.

The Challenge

The challenge is to design and build a pilot-scale hydrogel reactor that can produce bio-compatible/degradable plugs to be locally produced by the end-user. This "substrate as a service" model would focus on developing a user-friendly, manufacturing unit for synthetic substrates, enabling on-site production by horticulturalists without specialized expertise. The reactor should also be suitable for deployment in a modular fashion to allow scale up.  

The challenge holder would require the solution provider to deliver three key phases as part of the project: design, manufacture, and deploy the modular and renewably powered (solar/wind/battery) hydrogel reactor system. This phased approach would need to validate the feasibility of on-site hydrogel production, paving the way for widespread adoption across the horticulture industry.

The challenge holder is looking for expertise in mechanical, chemical, electrical and process engineering to bring forth open innovation to support the automated production of this polymer within its application as a replacement for peat in the agricultural industry.  It is thought that the skills required to address this challenge might come from sectors including Food, Agri-Tech, Chemicals or similar, although proposals from other areas are welcome.

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