Popular Science Illustrations
A popular science illustration I made for Dr. Sacha Escamez about various materials used throughout our history; hopefully continuing with the last sustainable age these days & in our near future.
Dr. Sacha Escamez research profile: https://bit.ly/2PcB5Kv
His popular science talk explaining โHow do plants make plumbing pipes from cells?โ can be seen here: https://bit.ly/2RNgFcG
The first part of a three-part visual communication strategy for the foundation of a new institute working mainly on life-chemistry couplings for production of renewables and carbon sequestration.
Here we can see the current status of fossil fuel usage that we have in society and the flux of CO2 from the ground to the athmosphere.
Illustrations made for Prof. Dr. APM Weber, CEPLAS Webpage: https://bit.ly/36xDzch
Second Illustration explaining the two strategies the Institute would work on to reverse the CO2 flow. The main strategy is electro-microbial conversion & using renewable electricity to produce bulk products like heat, fuel or oil. The second part is using plants and sequestering the CO2 in the soil.
Illustrations made for Prof. Dr. APM Weber, CEPLAS Webpage: https://bit.ly/36xDzch
The three departments that would be part of the new institute: electrochemistry & catalysis, microbial engineering & synthetic biology and a more photosynthesis/plant oriented department working on carbon sequestration.
Illustrations made for Prof. Dr. APM Weber, CEPLAS Webpage: https://bit.ly/36xDzch
Simplified Illustrations I made about the four CRISPR-edited plants rice, potato, maniok and wine. THe illustrations were used for an article written by Dominik Modrzejewski for the โProgressive Agrarwendeโ https://bit.ly/2EbMtzT
The article, written in german can be found here: https://bit.ly/2E9vIFz
A popular science Illustration I made to show the origins of mitochondria and chloroplasts in plants and which organisms developed from the cellular precursors.
The illustration was made for a presentation of Prof. Per Gardestrรถm for swedish TV, explaining Photosynthesis: โFotosyntesen โ ett samarbete mellan cellens energifabrikerโ
The video (in swedish) & some more of my illustrations can be seen here: https://bit.ly/2sgOwAb
An illustration I made for a popular science article about biorefineries for the SLU owned newsletter Fakta Skog.
I collaborated with the authors Totte Niittylรค (https://bit.ly/2tbIrp3), Urs Fisher (https://bit.ly/2skwFbo), Peter Immerzeel (https://bit.ly/2LMgVF9) and Christoffer Jonhsson (https://bit.ly/2YFGWet) on this Illustration.
The Fakta Skog article can be found here: https://bit.ly/2YGIaG6
A press-release illustration I made for summarising one of my PhD projects.
Simplified Illustration about photosynthesis for a presentation by Per Gardestrรถm to be broadcasted in swedish TV: โFotosyntesen โ ett samarbete mellan cellens energifabrikerโ
The video (in swedish) & some more of my illustrations can be seen here: https://bit.ly/2sgOwAb
Simplified Illustration about different cell types and organelles involved in photosynthesis for a presentation by Per Gardestrรถm to be broadcasted in swedish TV: โFotosyntesen โ ett samarbete mellan cellens energifabrikerโ
The video (in swedish) & some more of my illustrations can be seen here: https://bit.ly/2sgOwAb
I illustrated a potential future scenario in which we could have our own insect farms in the kitchen, feeding them food scraps & finally harvesting the insects & consuming them as alternative protein sources.
The article was written (in german) by Martin Reich & I provided the Illustrations. If you want to have a look: https://bit.ly/35d5jCM
In this article Martin Reich is trying out alternatives to animal-based food and comparing different products available on the market.
You can read up on the article here (in german): https://bit.ly/2sjCJ3V
Illustration summarising the first theme of a research initiative called Trees and Crops for the future (TC4F) for their yearly report.
Read more about TC4F here: https://bit.ly/2YGy9ZC
Illustration summarising the second theme of a research initiative called Trees and Crops for the future (TC4F) for their yearly report.
Read more about TC4F here: https://bit.ly/2YGy9ZC
Illustration summarising the third theme of a research initiative called Trees and Crops for the future (TC4F) for their yearly report.
Read more about TC4F here: https://bit.ly/2YGy9ZC
Different type of trees I have done for various illustrations: Arabidopsis-Poplar cross, young Poplar tree grown in the greenhouse and Banana trees.
A quick black-white illustration I made for the yearly Inktober to show that the fibonacci sequence can be basically found everywhere in nature :)
Karrikins are plant growth regulators that can be found in the smoke of burnt plants. They are known to be responsible for helping seeds to germinate after a fire occurred.