In this study we have evaluated three advanced water treatment technologies in laboratory conditions, electrochemical (EC), fluidized bed (FB) and nanocomposite-based systems. The performance of the three technologies were evaluated based on several characteristics, such as pollutant removal efficiency, operating cost (USD/m$^3$), specific energy consumption (kWh/kg), throughput (kg/h), space-time yield (STY, kg/m$^3$$\cdot$h) and energy utilization efficiency (kg/kWh). The results show that the nanocomposite system offers the best treatment efficiency (93.17% removal efficiency and very low variability (standard deviation = 0.78%), showing good stability and reliability of the process. We found that nanocomposite system had moderate operating cost of 0.109−0.116 USD/m$^3$ and specific energy consumption of 3.60−6.52 kWh/kg, with an average value of 4.70 kWh/kg. Also, it has the highest STY (0.94 kg/m$^3$$\cdot$h) and high energy utilization efficiency (0.2776 kg/kWh). In contrast, the FB system has the lowest average operating cost (0.1016 USD/m$^3$), lowest average specific energy consumption (4.20 kWh/kg) and the best energy utilization efficiency (0.2493 kg/kWh) and is the most economical option even with the lowest pollutant removal efficiency. The EC system provided the best removal efficiency (91.32%), but the highest operating cost (0.1242 USD/m$^3$) and energy consumption (6.50 kWh/kg) of the other technologies. In analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Tukey’s Honestly Significant Difference (HSD) tests, there was significant difference between all the technologies ($p$ $<$ 0.05). The nanocomposite system achieved 5.39% removal efficiency and the FB system was able to have better energy utilization than the EC and nanocomposite technology. In general, the nanocomposite technology was the best in terms of treatment efficiency, energy efficiency, and operational cost optimization and the FB system is the best choice for large-scale applications.
University students, as a key youth consumer demographic, will play a vital role in shaping sustainable purchasing behavior in the future. This study aims to uncover the factors influencing students’ intention to minimize food waste at universities using the extended norm activation theory. An online survey of 664 students examined intentions to reduce food waste on campus. Of these, 245 students used online food delivery (OFD), while 419 engaged in in-canteen dining (IC). To evaluate the empirical data, this study utilized a partial least squares structural equation model and executed measurement invariance testing within the composite model. The empirical results demonstrate that the activation of personal norms is driven by awareness of consequence and the ascription of responsibility, which consequently has a direct impact on the intention to reduce food waste. Personal norms also indirectly influence the intention to minimize food waste. Students who purchased meals only reported weaker personal norms and lower intention to reduce food waste than those who ate in the canteen. However, the OFD group showed greater awareness of consequence, which supported their efforts to reduce food waste, compared with the IC group. Overall, this study provides further insight into the psychological mechanisms underlying sustainable food consumption among university students.
The expansion of the shipbuilding industry in coastal areas contributes substantially to economic development while simultaneously posing significant risks to air quality and community health. This study analyzed the concentration and spatial distribution of air pollutants and assessed non-carcinogenic health risks in the shipyard industrial area of Batam City. Air quality measurements were conducted for PM$_{2.5}$, SO$_2$, NO$_2$, CO, and Pb parameters at multiple receptor points at different distances from the emission source. The field measurement data were then integrated with dispersion modeling using the American Meteorological Society/Environmental Protection Agency Regulatory Model (AERMOD) based on local meteorological conditions. Health risk was evaluated using the Hazard Quotient (HQ) approach with reference to national air quality standards. Pollutant concentrations decreased consistently with increasing distance from emission sources, with PM$_{2.5}$ exhibiting the widest and most persistent spatial distribution. Although most pollutant concentrations remained below regulatory thresholds, PM$_{2.5}$ yielded HQ values exceeding 1.0 across all receptor distances up to 2000 m, indicating significant non-carcinogenic health risk at all observed distances. Model validation demonstrated strong spatial agreement between measured and simulated concentrations ($R^2$ $>$ 0.84), with a consistent tendency toward underestimation of absolute values. The integration of spatial dispersion modeling with health risk assessment offers a comprehensive analytical framework for air quality management and public health protection in coastal industrial settings.
The increasing pressure on maritime ports to reduce greenhouse gas emissions has accelerated the adoption of artificial intelligence to support decarbonization strategies. However, existing research remains fragmented across operational, environmental, and energy domains. This study provides a structured analysis of artificial intelligence applications in port decarbonization by integrating a systematic review with bibliometric analysis. A total of 165 records were identified from the Scopus database, and after screening and eligibility assessment, 62 peer-reviewed articles published between 2021 and 2025 were included in the final analysis. The systematic review identifies four major thematic areas: energy management, emission monitoring and prediction, operational optimization, and renewable and alternative energy integration. The bibliometric analysis complements these findings by revealing dominant research clusters and the intellectual structure of the field. The results indicate that operational optimization represents the most mature application area, delivering efficiency gains that contribute to indirect emission reduction. Emission monitoring and prediction provide accurate environmental diagnostics but remain limited in decision support integration. Energy management demonstrates growing application with varying impact on emission reduction, while renewable and alternative energy integration remains an emerging field with strong long-term potential. Despite these advances, several gaps persist, including limited real-world validation, fragmented data environments, and weak integration between predictive models and operational decision-making. The study contributes by providing an integrated perspective that links artificial intelligence techniques with port operations and decarbonization outcomes. The findings offer insights for researchers, port authorities, and policymakers seeking to advance the implementation of artificial intelligence in sustainable port development.
Remittance inflows can provide funds for the renewable energy transition (RET) in developing economies. This research aims to examine the effect of remittance inflows on RET in 11 Middle East and North Africa (MENA) economies over the period 2002–2023, while controlling for foreign direct investments (FDI), economic growth, and trade openness (TO) in the model. The moderating effect of institutional quality (IQ) is also tested in these relationships. In addition, spatial econometrics is applied due to the geographic and economic linkages among MENA economies. The results show that remittances and economic growth increase RET, with both direct localized effects and spillovers. So, these factors help raise RET in local economies as well as in their neighboring MENA economies. Governance also plays a positive moderating role in improving the effects of remittances and economic growth on RET. TO increases RET in local economies. However, the spillover effects of TO reduce RET in neighboring economies. Lastly, FDI has a statistically insignificant effect on RET in all analyses. This study recommends promoting remittance inflows and further improving IQ in the MENA region to encourage RET.
Industry 4.0 transforms modern manufacturing systems through the integration of cyber-physical systems, the Industrial Internet of Things, artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), and digital twin (DT) technologies. Autonomous industrial control remains a critical challenge in complex engineering environments because conventional control architectures often struggle to handle nonlinear dynamics, distributed decision-making, system uncertainties, and real-time operational variability. This review investigates the role of AI-, ML-, and DT-enabled autonomous control systems in improving adaptive intelligence, predictive capability, operational optimization, and resilient decision-making within smart industrial environments. A comprehensive technical review was conducted to examine recent developments in intelligent system modeling, predictive analytics, adaptive and self-learning control, real-time anomaly detection, multi-objective optimization, quality control, and energy-efficient industrial operations. The architectures and operational mechanisms of the AI–ML–DT-integrated control frameworks were analyzed from the perspective of complex cyber-physical industrial systems. The interrelationships among distributed sensing, intelligent data processing, virtual simulation, and autonomous control layers were also evaluated to identify current technological capabilities and implementation limitations. The analysis showed that the integration of AI, ML, and DT technologies significantly improved predictive maintenance performance, adaptive process control, fault diagnosis accuracy, operational flexibility, and energy optimization in Industry 4.0 environments. The reviewed studies demonstrated that DT-assisted virtual environments enabled safe real-time optimization and intelligent decision validation before physical deployment. The results also revealed that autonomous control architectures enhanced the resilience and self-adaptive capability of industrial systems operating under dynamic and uncertain conditions. However, several limitations were identified, including interoperability constraints, model synchronization challenges, computational complexity, cybersecurity risks, and scalability issues in distributed industrial networks. This study demonstrates that the convergence of AI, ML, and DT technologies establishes an important foundation for next-generation autonomous cyber-physical industrial systems. The proposed review provides a comprehensive engineering perspective for understanding intelligent industrial control architectures and offers valuable insights into the development of scalable, adaptive, and energy-efficient autonomous manufacturing systems for future Industry 4.0 applications.
An Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) report is an essential information source for evaluating a company’s performance in sustainability practices. Organizations structure their environmental impacts, social responsibilities, and governance practices within a defined framework. This standardization is provided by the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), which constitutes an internationally recognized guideline for sustainability reporting. Traditional reporting workflows are time-consuming for organizations and prone to data-entry errors, which limits the reliability of disclosed information. In this context, leveraging the capabilities of Large Language Models (LLMs) offers significant time and resource savings. This study uses the Llama-3.1-8B-Instruct model under two scenarios, Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) and Low-Rank Adaptation (LoRA) fine-tuning, to analyze 30 food-sector ESG reports and produce ESG summaries, SWOT analyses, and GRI-aligned recommendations. The two approaches are evaluated on a stratified hold-out set of 6 unseen test reports (24 reports used for training) under a fair, matched-budget setup in which RAG retrieves the target report at inference. On four quality metrics, LoRA achieved higher mean scores than RAG; however, statistically significant differences were observed in only 4 of the 12 task–metric comparisons. Token usage was comparable, whereas RAG was substantially faster at inference. Rather than favoring one approach over the other, these findings reveal a trade-off between output quality and computational efficiency: LoRA yields quality gains on specific metrics, whereas RAG is substantially more efficient at inference. Given the limited size of the held-out test set, these results should be interpreted with caution.
Surface acoustic wave propagation in semiconductor systems is strongly influenced by coupled thermal, electromagnetic, and mechanical interactions, particularly under high-frequency operating conditions encountered in advanced microelectronic and sensing devices. Existing thermoelastic wave models generally neglect the simultaneous interaction of Hall current effects, rotational dynamics, temperature-dependent material behavior, and non-Fourier thermal relaxation, which limits their capability for accurately characterizing multiphysics wave phenomena in semiconductor media. This study investigates Rayleigh surface wave propagation in a rotating magneto-thermoelastic silicon semiconductor half-space by developing a unified multiphysics framework incorporating Hall current effects and a multi-dual-phase-lag heat conduction model with temperature-dependent material properties. The coupled governing equations were transformed into dimensionless form and analytically solved using normal-mode analysis to derive the secular equation governing Rayleigh-type surface waves. Numerical simulations were performed using experimentally validated silicon parameters to evaluate the phase velocity, attenuation coefficient, penetration depth, and specific heat loss under different thermal, electromagnetic, and rotational conditions. A variance-based global sensitivity analysis based on Sobol indices was additionally conducted to quantify the relative influence of the governing multiphysical parameters on wave behavior. The results showed that rotational effects increased phase velocity and penetration depth, whereas temperature-dependent thermal softening reduced wave propagation capability and enhanced attenuation. Hall current effects and magnetic field intensity exhibited competing influences on wave kinematics and damping characteristics. The sensitivity analysis revealed that electromagnetic parameters primarily governed wave kinematics, while the thermal softening parameter dominated thermodynamic energy dissipation behavior. Nearly uniform sensitivity distributions were observed for phase velocity and penetration depth, indicating strong multiphysical coupling among thermal, elastic, and electromagnetic fields within the semiconductor system. The results indicate that the proposed framework provides a physically consistent and quantitatively interpretable platform for analyzing coupled wave propagation phenomena in semiconductor engineering systems. The developed model offers practical guidance for the design and optimization of surface acoustic wave devices, semiconductor sensors, and thermo-electromagnetic microelectronic systems operating under complex coupled-field environments.