Register Now for WorshipStreamTV – Videoguys

Register Now for WorshipStreamTV – Videoguys

Join WorshipStreamTV for an exciting three-day online event! With just one registration, you’ll unlock access to three webinars designed to enhance your House of Worship live production. Day one covers “Live Production Needs for your House of Worship: Making the Most of Your Message In a Hybrid World,” going over why hybrid streaming is important for Houses of Worship. On day two, discover “Creating the Best Camera Environment for all of your House of Worship’s Production Needs” and get guidance on choosing the best equipment. Day three explores the future with “AV Over IP and the Technologies Available to House of Worship Today.” Don’t miss out on this chance to boost your worship experience—all in one registration!

February 6th – 8th, 2024 at 3pm EST
One registration gets you access to all 3 webinars!

REGISTER HERE

Live Production Needs for your House of Worship: Making the Most of Your Message In a Hybrid World
Tuesday, Feb 6th @ 3pm EST
Houses of Worship of all congregation sizes are being faced with the need to reach and engage their community in new and creative ways. Join WorshipStream.TV as we discuss the challenges of the hybrid production environment and help you identify the system you need to make the most impact in your church and to the larger community online. Check out the production tools available to livestream anywhere in the world.

Registration will also be your entry to win! Prizes will be announced shortly!

Creating the Best Camera Environment for all of your House of Worship’s Production Needs
Wednesday, Feb 7th @ 3pm EST

Join WorshipStream.TV for a detailed guide of top camera options, including PTZ Cameras, camcorders, and more, perfect for House of Worship live productions. Discover key features to enhance your workflow and elevate production quality. Join us to optimize your House of Worship experience with the perfect camera solutions.

   

Plus case studies from some of the biggest system integrators in the industry! Join to hear from pros who are working with houses of worship all over the U.S.

   

AV Over IP and the Technologies Available to House of Worship Today

Thursday, Feb 8th @ 3pm EST

Learn about the evolution of live production technology in Houses of Worship and the future of live streaming. Join WorshipStream.TV for an in-depth discussion about the transformative impact of technologies like NDI and Dante AV on the landscape of worship live streaming. Learn about current trends and where this technology is headed in the future to keep your House of Worship at the forefront of the digital worship experience.

   

AI Acquisitions: Who’s Leading the Charge and Why?

Artificial Intelligence (AI) has a significant impact on various sectors like healthcare, finance, education, and entertainment. This technology is reshaping business operations, demonstrating its undeniable potential to transform various industries. However, developing AI solutions is not without its challenges. It requires a unique combination of specialized…

3 Questions: A new home for music at MIT

3 Questions: A new home for music at MIT

More than 1,500 students enroll in music classes each year at MIT. More than 500 student musicians participate in one of 30 on-campus ensembles. In spring 2025, to better provide for its thriving musical program, MIT will inaugurate its new music building, a 35,000-square-foot three-volume facility adjacent to Kresge Auditorium. The new building will feature high-quality rehearsal and performance spaces, a professional recording studio, classrooms, and laboratories for the music technology program.

Keeril Makan is the Michael (1949) and Sonja Koerner Music Composition Professor, section head of the MIT Music and Theater Arts Section (MTA), and was recently named associate dean of the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences. A celebrated composer, Makan has been instrumental in the conception and realization of the MIT Music Building, which will also be known as Building W18. He speaks here about the ways that music helps MIT broaden and fulfill its mission, and the opportunities that the new facilities will provide.

Q: After many years of planning, the MIT Music Building is taking shape. How will this new facility change the MIT experience?

A: There is a tremendous demand on campus for the opportunity to make music and to listen to live music. Some of our students arrive at MIT already planning to study and perform music. Others pick up the passion on campus. We have such a flourishing music community here, with so many different types of ensembles we want to support. In addition to the Western Classical tradition, like our orchestra or wind ensemble, where we’ve always been strong, there is also a strong interest in jazz on campus. In fact, we’ve just hired our first jazz professor, Miguel Zenón. More and more students want to explore and experience music from other cultures. We have our Balinese Gamelan, as well as Rambax, a Senegalese drumming group that has the second-largest enrollment for an ensemble, after our orchestra. Our building is designed to allow all of these different musical traditions to exist simultaneously, all equally respected and supported.

With such a strong interest in music among our students and MIT community, the Institute is providing the proper facilities where students and faculty can pursue and develop that interest. And a big part of that is proper acoustics. At MIT we have laboratory spaces that provide stringent environmental conditions for temperature, humidity, vibration, and particulate control. Otherwise, the samples can be contaminated, and the results altered. It’s the same thing in music — we need acoustically controlled rehearsal spaces where the students hear and perform music without contamination from other sound sources. Our performance hall is designed for the audience to hear the music exactly the way the performers hear it. They will experience the music together, in a space that fosters intimacy between the performers and their audience.

Q: Will the new music building attract a different type of student to MIT?

A: I’m not sure whether the new facility will attract a different type of student as much as keep MIT competitive in attracting the type of student who will thrive here. Undergraduates and graduate students have come to expect state-of-the-art facilities across the board for their work in STEM, but also for the parts of their lives that support or complement that work. Music is a big part of that support at MIT. In order for us to stay competitive, to continue to attract the students we believe will help us further our mission, we needed to raise the bar in terms of the level of support we offer students in music. But it’s not just about being competitive in attracting gifted students. Part of our work here is taking on and providing solutions to some of the world’s most pressing and complex challenges. Solving those problems, of course, requires technical expertise. But it also requires wisdom, emotion, and compassion. Empathizing with other members of our community can lead to solutions that will make all of our lives better. And while it’s important that this new building keeps us competitive as an institution, it’s even more important for it to keep us competitive in creating the types of people best suited to take on the world’s great problems. 

Q: How can music, and other arts, complement and support a student’s work in science and technology?

A: Making music is a physical activity. There is something about the small motions of the fingers, the voice resonating, that affects the body, that connects the body with what you are experiencing or feeling. It pulls you completely into the now. Having this building, right in the middle of our campus, makes it clear that this centering is important to MIT and its mission.

For the students rehearsing and performing in the building, or the students who compose music for our new facility, or for the students who will develop the hardware and software that engineers will use to produce music, the problem-solving inherent in those activities is very similar to what they do in STEM. Both are creative processes, where you learn to evaluate, manage, and integrate multiple parameters. Creating music or music technology requires you to rotate a series of different problems in your mind, and to devise a way for them to fit together. It fosters an internal desire for discovery, and for creativity. All of these are skills that, when mastered, easily translate into other activities, including scientific research, math, or engineering. MIT understands that music, and all the arts, are essential in helping our students take on the many challenges facing our world, like the climate crisis, or the impact of AI. Not just in creating an awareness of our humanity, but in training the minds and hearts of the people who will solve those issues. We now have the building that will support that crucial education.

A new way to swiftly eliminate micropollutants from water

A new way to swiftly eliminate micropollutants from water

“Zwitterionic” might not be a word you come across every day, but for Professor Patrick Doyle of the MIT Department of Chemical Engineering, it’s a word that’s central to the technology his group is developing to remove micropollutants from water. Derived from the German word “zwitter,” meaning “hybrid,” “zwitterionic” molecules are those with an equal number of positive and negative charges.

Devashish Gokhale, a PhD student in Doyle’s lab, uses the example of a magnet to describe zwitterionic materials. “On a magnet, you have a north pole and a south pole that stick to each other, and on a zwitterionic molecule, you have a positive charge and a negative charge which stick to each other in a similar way.” Because many inorganic micropollutants and some organic micropollutants are themselves charged, Doyle and his team have been investigating how to deploy zwitterionic molecules to capture micropollutants in water. 

In a new paper in Nature Water, Doyle, Gokhale, and undergraduate student Andre Hamelberg explain how they use zwitterionic hydrogels to sustainably capture both organic and inorganic micropollutants from water with minimal operational complexity. In the past, zwitterionic molecules have been used as coatings on membranes for water treatment because of their non-fouling properties. But in the Doyle group’s system, zwitterionic molecules are used to form the scaffold material, or backbone within the hydrogel — a porous three-dimensional network of polymer chains that contains a significant amount of water. “Zwitterionic molecules have very strong attraction to water compared to other materials which are used to make hydrogels or polymers,” says Gokhale. What’s more, the positive and negative charges on zwitterionic molecules cause the hydrogels to have lower compressibility than what has been commonly observed in hydrogels. This makes for significantly more swollen, robust, and porous hydrogels, which is important for the scale up of the hydrogel-based system for water treatment.

The early stages of this research were supported by a seed grant from MIT’s Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab (J-WAFS). Doyle’s group is now pursuing commercialization of the platform for both at-home use and industrial scale applications, with support from a J-WAFS Solutions grant.

Seeking a sustainable solution

Micropollutants are chemically diverse materials that can be harmful to human health and the environment, even though they are typically found at low concentrations (micrograms to milligrams per liter) relative to conventional contaminants. Micropollutants can be organic or inorganic and can be naturally-occurring or synthetic. Organic micropollutants are mostly carbon-based molecules and include pesticides and per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), known as “forever chemicals.” Inorganic micropollutants, such as heavy metals like lead and arsenic, tend to be smaller than organic micropollutants. Unfortunately, both organic and inorganic micropollutants are pervasive in the environment.

Many micropollutants come from industrial processes, but the effects of human-induced climate change are also contributing to the environmental spread of micropollutants. Gokhale explains that, in California, for example, fires burn plastic electrical cables and leech micropollutants into natural ecosystems. Doyle adds that “outside of climate change, things like pandemics can spike the number of organic micropollutants in the environment due to high concentrations of pharmaceuticals in wastewater.”

It’s no surprise then, that over the past few years micropollutants have become more and more of a concern. These chemicals have garnered attention in the media and led to “significant change in the environmental engineering and regulatory landscape” says Gokhale. In March 2023, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed a strict, federal standard that would regulate six different PFAS chemicals in drinking water. Just last October, the EPA proposed banning the micropollutant trichloroethylene, a cancer-causing chemical that can be found in brake cleaners and other consumer products. And as recently as November, the EPA proposed that water utilities nationwide be required to replace all of their lead pipes to protect the public from lead exposure. Internationally, Gokhale notes the Oslo Paris Convention, whose mission is to protect the marine environment of the northeast Atlantic Ocean, including phasing out the discharge of offshore chemicals from the oil and gas industries. 

With each new, necessary regulation to protect the safety of our water resources, the need for effective water treatment processes grows. Compounding this challenge is the need to make water treatment processes that are sustainable and energy-efficient. 

The benchmark method to treat micropollutants in water is activated carbon. However, making filters with activated carbon is energy-intensive, requiring very high temperatures in large, centralized facilities. Gokhale says approximately “four kilograms of coal are needed to make one kilogram of activated carbon, so you lose a significant amount of carbon dioxide to the environment.” According to the World Economic Forum, global water and wastewater treatment accounts for 5 percent of annual emissions. In the U.S. alone, the EPA reports that drinking water and wastewater systems account for over 45 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions annually.

“We need to develop methods which have smaller climate footprints than methods which are being used industrially today,” says Gokhale.

Supportign a “high-risk” project

In September 2019, Doyle and his lab embarked on an initial project to develop a microparticle-based platform to remove a broad range of micropollutants from water. Doyle’s group had been using hydrogels in pharmaceutical processing to formulate drug molecules into pill format. When he learned about the J-WAFS seed grant opportunity for early-stage research in water and food systems, Doyle realized his pharmaceutical work with hydrogels could be applied to environmental issues like water treatment. “I would never have gotten funding for this project if I went to the NSF [National Science Foundation], because they would just say, ‘you’re not a water person.’ But the J-WAFS seed grant offered a way for a high-risk, high-reward kind of project,” Doyle says.

In March 2022, Doyle, Gokhale, and MIT undergraduate Ian Chen published findings from the seed grant work, describing their use of micelles within hydrogels for water treatment. Micelles are spherical structures that form when molecules called surfactants (found in things like soap), come in contact with water or other liquids. The team was able to synthesize micelle-laden hydrogel particles that soak up micropollutants from water like a sponge. Unlike activated carbon, the hydrogel particle system is made from environmentally friendly materials. Furthermore, the system’s materials are made at room temperature, making them exceedingly more sustainable than activated carbon.

Building off the success of the seed grant, Doyle and his team were awarded a J-WAFS Solutions grant in September 2022 to help move their technology from the lab to the market. With this support, the researchers have been able to build, test, and refine pilot-scale prototypes of their hydrogel platform. System iterations during the solutions grant period have included the use of the zwitterionic molecules, a novel advancement from the seed grant work.  

Rapid elimination of micropollutants is of special importance in commercial water treatment processes, where there is a limited amount of time water can spend inside the operational filtration unit. This is referred to as contact time, explains Gokhale. In municipal-scale or industrial-scale water treatment systems, contact times are usually less than 20 minutes and can be as short as five minutes. 

“But as people have been trying to target these emerging micropollutants of concern, they realized they can’t get to sufficiently low concentrations on the same time scales as conventional contaminants,” Gokhale says. “Most technologies focus only on specific molecules or specific classes of molecules. So, you have whole technologies which are focusing only on PFAS, and then you have other technologies for lead and metals. When you start thinking about removing all of these contaminants from water, you end up with designs which have a very large number of unit operations. And that’s an issue because you have plants which are in the middle of large cities, and they don’t necessarily have space to expand to increase their contact times to efficiently remove multiple micropollutants,” he adds.

Since zwitterionic molecules possess unique properties that confer high porosity, the researchers have been able to engineer a system for quicker uptake of micropollutants from water. Tests show that the hydrogels can eliminate six chemically diverse micropollutants at least 10 times faster than commercial activated carbon. The system is also compatible with a diverse set of materials, making it multifunctional. Micropollutants can bind to many different sites within the hydrogel platform: organic micropollutants bind to the micelles or surfactants while inorganic micropollutants bind to the zwitterionic molecules. Micelles, surfactants, zwitterionic molecules, and other chelating agents can be swapped in and out to essentially tune the system with different functionalities based on the profile of the water being treated. This kind of “plug-and-play” addition of various functional agents does not require a change in the design or synthesis of the hydrogel platform, and adding more functionalities does not take away from existing functionality. In this way, the zwitterionic-based system can rapidly remove multiple contaminants at lower concentrations in a single step, without the need for large, industrial units or capital expenditure. 

Perhaps most importantly, the particles in the Doyle group’s system can be regenerated and used over and over again. By simply soaking the particles in an ethanol bath, they can be washed of micropollutants for indefinite use without loss of efficacy. When activated carbon is used for water treatment, the activated carbon itself becomes contaminated with micropollutants and must be treated as toxic chemical waste and disposed of in special landfills. Over time, micropollutants in landfills will reenter the ecosystem, perpetuating the problem.

Arjav Shah, a PhD-MBA candidate in MIT’s Department of Chemical Engineering and the MIT Sloan School of Management, respectively, recently joined the team to lead commercialization efforts. The team has already piloted the technology through a number of commercialization programs at MIT and in the greater Boston area.

The combined strengths of each member of the team continue to drive the project forward in impactful ways, including undergraduate students like Andre Hamelberg, the third author on the Nature Water paper. Hamelberg is a participant in MIT’s Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP). Gokhale, who is also a J-WAFS Fellow, provides training and mentorship to Hamelberg and other UROP students in the lab.

“We see this as an educational opportunity,” says Gokhale, noting that the UROP students learn science and chemical engineering through the research they conduct in the lab. The J-WAFS project has also been “a way of getting undergrads interested in water treatment and the more sustainable aspects of chemical engineering,” Gokhale says. He adds that it’s “one of the few projects which goes all the way from designing specific chemistries to building small filters and units and scaling them up and commercializing them. It’s a really good learning opportunity for the undergrads and we’re always excited to have them work with us.”

In four years, the technology has been able to grow from an initial idea to a technology with scalable, real-world applications, making it an exemplar J-WAFS project. The fruitful collaboration between J-WAFS and the Doyle lab serves as inspiration for any MIT faculty who may want to apply their research to water or food systems projects.

“The J-WAFS project serves as a way to demystify what a chemical engineer does,” says Doyle. “I think that there’s an old idea of chemical engineering as working in just oil and gas. But modern chemical engineering is focused on things which make life and the environment better.”