The culture of innovation at Endress+Hauser goes far beyond research and development.
Covestro has made circular economy a guiding principle – and is showing the way forward in the plastics industry by fully committing to it. A look at the latest developments from Leverkusen, Germany.
Endress+Hauser has adapted Coriolis technology to be viable in single-use applications. The newly developed Proline Promass U 500 measures flow rates with precision and efficiency to match – as well as being ideally built for subsequent recycling.
Beginnings are always hard – and so it is with the circular economy. Michael Sinz, director of strategic business, explains how it can become a reality for the process industry and how Endress+Hauser is making headway with its implementation.
It’s time to rethink our linear economic model: the consequences of all that taking, making and wasting are getting harder and harder to ignore. But as yet we seem to lack that initial impetus, that spark, needed to set the circular economy in motion.
For years, Endress+Hauser has been accelerating the pace of digitalization. This is now helping customers ranscend borders and simplify their daily activities. Here are three examples.
From a distance it looks like a tree, but on closer inspection it turns out to be an innovative small-scale power plant: a wind tree that delivers sustainable electricity at Endress+Hauser in Gerlingen, Germany.
Radiometry gets used when other level sensors run up against their limits. Simon Weidenbruch gave Endress+Hauser’s Gammapilot new energy.
The Industrial Internet of Things makes it possible: Micropilot FWR30 is the world’s first cloud-connected 80 gigahertz radar level sensor that measures and monitors both stationary and mobile intermediate bulk containers.