Title: Richard g lugar center for renewable energy
1Richard g lugar center for renewable energy
2Challenges faced by renewable energy
- Economical Cost
- Technical Reliability
- Social Acceptance
- Political Government Policies
3Mission Statement
- The Richard G. Lugar Center for Renewable Energy
(LCRE) is established to address the societal
need for clean, affordable and renewable energy
sources - research
- education and outreach
- technology transfer
- sound public policy
4Participating Campuses and Schools
- IUPUI, IU Bloomington, IU South Bend
- School of Engineering Technology (IUPUI)
- School of Science (IUPUI, IUB, IUSB)
- School of Public and Environmental Affairs
(IUPUI, IUB) - School of Medicine (IUPUI)
5Leadership
- Center Director Dr. Andrew Hsu, Professor of
Mechanical Engineering. - Associate Director Dr. Alan Jones, Assistant
Professor of Mechanical Engineering. - Associate Director Ken Richards, Associate
Professor of Public and Environmental Affairs, IU
Bloomington.
6Disciplines Involved
- Mechanical Engineering
- Biomedical Engineering
- Electrical Engineering
- Physics
- Chemistry and Chemical Biology
- Medicine, Yeast and Enzyme
- Polymer
- Combustion
- Computer modeling and multi-scale simulation
- Biology energy generating plants
- Public and Environmental Affairs
7Areas of Current Research
- Bio-fuel production and applications
- Environmentally benign usage of
renewable/bio-fuels - Renewable energy through fuel cell technology
- Renewable hydrogen (Solar, Reformers)
- Advanced battery technologies, HEV and PHEV
- Solar photovoltaic
- Policy and societal issues
8In perspective
9Plant biology and biofuels
- Find the plants best suited for energy
production - Study the differences in resource input and
environmental impact - for different energy plants
- Genetically change the plants so that they can
be produced in harsh conditions - that will not compete for resources with food
production
10Biofuel Production
11Renewable Hydrogen Generation - Ethanol Reformer
Water
Sun Light
Energy
Fuel Cell
CO2
Reformer
Corn Ethanol
Hydrogen
12Ethanol to Gasoline Conversion
Water
Sun Light
Energy
CO2
ETG
Corn Ethanol
Gasoline
13Bio-Gasoline Compared with Oil Produce
14Clean Combustion of Renewable/Synthetic Fuels
Future hydrogen-rich renewable and synthetic
fuels enable super-efficient combustion engines
for power and transport. The Center conducts
research on fuel conversion and utilization from
non-petroleum sources, and novel clean combustion
and pulsed compressor technologies for aircraft,
automobile, and power-generation engines.
15Direct Methanol/Ethanol Fuel Cell
- Renewable
- Zero emission
- High efficiency
- Key technologies
- Catalyst
- Membranes
16Highlights in Fuel Cell Research
- Fundamental Research of Catalysts and Membranes
- Theoretical Modeling
- Catalysts and Membrane Synthesis
- Molecular Scale Characterization
- Electrochemical Characterizations
- Fuel Cell Fabrication and Testing
- Electrode and Membrane Fabrication
- Performance, Durability and Impendence Testing
- Applications
- Portable Electronics
- Commercial and Residential
- Regenerative Fuel Cell System (RFCS)
17Fuel Cell Research Polymers for Fuel Cell
Research
18Self-Healing Polymer Technologyfor Fuel Cell
Applications
Catalyst
- Independent initiation of healing
- Automatically continues to completion
- Localized healing (only at damage)
Microcapsule
Issues
- Compatible Chemistries
- Retains conductivity
- Resists
- humidity
- temperature
Demonstrated life extension in model polymers
19Solar Energy
Thermovoltaic Effect
Maher Rizkalla Matt Rubin
Thermovoltaic cells use multiple thermal phonons
(heat waves) with non-discrete energy levels to
generate electric carriers from all phonons,
allowing them to convert waste heat into energy.
Calculations support power density of 0.6W/cm2 at
300K for bi-layer device (shown left). Could
reach 60-80 efficiency
20Policy Integration
- Integration of renewable energy in larger policy
context - Economic and financial analysis
- Lifecycle analysis of energy and environmental
impacts - Forest and agricultural land use analysis
21Vision for the Center
- The Richard G. Lugar Center will be a premier
research center in the US - World leader in selected research areas
- Prominent influence in the nation attained
through both research activities and out reach
activities such as organizing and hosting public
forums, workshops, and conferences
22Distributed Power Generation
23Current Members
- Hydrogen Generation and Bio-Gasoline
- Andrew Hsu, Professor of Mechanical Engineering
- Zhiwei Yang, Visiting Professor, Instrumentation
- Lihong Huang, Postdoctoral Fellow, Catalysis
24Current Members
- Photovotaic Solar Energy
- Maher Rizkala, Professor of Electrical
Engineering - Mathew Rubin, IURTC
25Current Members
- Distributed Power Generation and Hybrid Vehicles
- Yaobin Chen, Professor of Electrical and Computer
Engineering. Power grid coupling, HEV - Steve Rovnyak, Assistant Professor of Electrical
and Computer Engineering. Power grid coupling - Sarah Koskie, Assistant Professor of Electrical
and Computer Engineering. Power grid coupling - Anwar Sohel, Assistant Professor of Mechanical
Engineering. HEV and PHEV
26Current Members
- Combustion
- Razi Nalim, Associate Professor of Mechanical
Engineering. Clean combustion - Siva Krishnan, Assistant Professor of Mechanical
Engineering. Clean combustion
27Current Members
- Biofuel
- Mark Goebl, Professor of Biochemistry and
Molecular Biology, School of Medicine. Enzyme and
yeast for cellulosic ethanol production - Stephen Randall, Professor Biology, Biofuel
production - Xianzhong Wang, Assistant Professor of Biology.
Energy generating plants
28Current Members
- Policy and Economics
- David McSwane, Professor, School of Public and
Environmental Affairs, Indianapolis. Policies - Ken Richards, Associate Professor, School of
Public and Environmental Affairs, Bloomington.
Policy and economics of energy and CO2
sequestration. - Patricia Fox, Assistant Professor, Engineering
and Technology, policy, economics, and
Sustainability
29Renewable Hydrogen Generation - Photovoltaic
Sun Light
Energy
Hyrogen
Fuel Cell
Electrolyser
30summary
- Basic structure for the Center has been set up
- Good faculty participation
- Research activities show promising results
- Outreach programs off to a good start
- Work remains to be done to reach our goal but we
are confident that we will realize our vision
31Strategies for realizing the Vision
- Increase activities in research and outreach
- Increase manpower
- attract worlds leading researchers in selected
research areas to the center - Establish a physical presence
- cluster of state of the art labs (near term)
- new building (mid to long term)
32Current Members
- Fuel Cell and Batteries
- Andrew Hsu, Professor of ME, Fuel Cell Systems
(1999) - Rongrong Chen, Associate Professor of MET.
Electrochemistry, catalysis, fuel cells,
batteries (2004) - Guofeng Wang, Assistant Professor of ME,
Materials (2007) - Jian Xie, Assistant Professor of ME,
electrochemistry, fuel cell and batteries (2007) - Guigui Wang, Assistant Research Professor,
polymer membrane synthesis (2007) - Dong Xie, Assistant Professor of Biomedical
Engineering, Polymer synthesis - Kelsey M. Forsythe, Director of Computational
Molecular Science Facility Quantum and
molecular simulation of fuel cell catalysis - Jeffery Zaleski, Professor of Chemistry. IUB.
Macrocycle Catalysts synthesis - Hasan Akay, Chancellors Professor of Mechanical
Engineering. Computer modeling - Alan Jones, Assistant Professor of ME, Membrane
Durability
33Thank you for your support