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Discover seminar with Saiful Islam, Oct. 30, 2024 at 4:00 pmFrom Batteries to Solar Cells: Exploring Energy Materials on the Atomic Scale

Further breakthroughs in materials for low carbon energy applications require advances in new compositions and underpinning materials science.

Indeed, a greater fundamental understanding into new materials for lithium batteries and solar cells require atomic-scale characterization of their structural, electronic and transport behaviour. In this context, a combination of materials modelling and experimental work is now a powerful approach for investigating these properties on the atomic scale.

This presentation will describe such studies in two principal areas: (i) redox chemistry of lithium-rich cathodes for lithium-ion batteries; and (ii) ion migration and molecular passivation effects in metal-halide perovskites for solar cells.

Bio:

Saiful Islam is Professor of Materials Science at the University of Oxford, UK. He grew up in London and obtained his Chemistry degree and PhD from University College London followed by positions at the Eastman Kodak Labs, New York, USA, and the Universities of Surrey and Bath.

His research encompasses atomic- and nano-scale processes in new materials for lithium- and sodium-ion batteries, and for perovskite solar cells. He leads the Faraday Institution CATMAT project on lithium cathode materials and has received awards from the Royal Society, American Chemical Society, Royal Society of Chemistry.

Saiful presented the 2016 Royal Institution Christmas Lectures for BBC TV on the theme of energy, which included a lemon battery world record. He is a Patron of Humanists UK and when not exploring energy materials, he enjoys family breaks (as a dad of two), films and indie music.

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McISCE Discover Seminar with Ying Zheng, Sept. 30, 2024, Trottier building, room 1100

Catalytic Approaches to CO2 Hydrogenation for Carbon Natural Energy Solutions

Limiting global warming will require major transitions in the energy sector. This will require a substantial reduction in fossil fuel use, widespread electrification, and use of alternative fuels. Catalytic technologies will play a key role in this transition.

This seminar will discuss the rationale designs of catalyst and appropriate reaction processing technologies that are applied in biofuel production and low carbon CO2 reduction. CO2 is thermodynamically stable that makes it difficult to react under mild conditions. Various methodologies have been investigated for converting CO2 into chemicals, including photocatalysis and electrochemical approaches.

Non-thermal plasma (NTP) also known as cold plasma, comprises electrons, neutrals, electronically and vibrationally excited species, ions, radicals, and atoms. When these charged particles interact with chemicals, they can act as catalysts, facilitating reactions such as bond dissociation or formation to occur at lower temperatures and under milder conditions compared to chemical processes currently employed in commercial applications.

The objective of this study is to showcase the practical implementation of an NTP system for converting CO2 into valuable chemicals.

Bio

Professor Zheng is a professor and a Canada Research Chair (Tier I) in Chemical Reaction and Intensification with the Department of Chemical Engineering, Western University. Dr. Zheng is a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Engineering and the Engineering Institute of Canada. She is also a Fellow of the Chemical Institute of Canada CIC, the Royal Society of chemistry (UK), the Institution of Chemical Engineers (UK) and the Global Academy of Chinese Chemical Engineers.

Her research interests lie in the field of catalysis and catalytic processes for clean energy innovations. New catalytic materials along with catalytic processes are developed for application in CO2 utilization, N2 fixation, H2 production and clean/biofuel upgrading.

She has published more than 220+ referred journal papers in top-tiered journals in addition to 10 patented technologies with three have been licensed. She has consistently been recognized as one of the Top 2% Scientists worldwide in the Stanford University Analysis from 2019 to 2023. She has received numerous awards, including the 2018 Applied Catalysis Awards (the Royal Society of Chemistry, UK), the Award in Design and Industrial Practice in 2018, and the 2010 Syncrude Canada Innovation Award from CIC.

Rock bed thermal energy storage

Professor Jaap Hoffmann of Stellenbosch University

Friday, July 19, 2024, 1:30-3:00 pm

Trottier Building – Room 2110

Abstract:ÌýPacked beds offer an inexpensive and versatile way of storing solar heat for power generation and process heat applications. In large systems, the flow through the packed bed will be three-dimensional, and conventional plug flow methods are inadequate to design and/or evaluate thermal energy storage systems (TES).

At Stellenbosch, research into 3D TES systems has been ongoing for the last decade, using a combination of CFD and experiments. In this seminar, the prediction of pressure drop and heat transfer in TES based on particle Reynolds number, particle orientation and shape parameters, and flow tortuosity is presented.

Bio: Jaap Hoffmann is an associate professor in the Department of Mechanical & Mechatronic Engineering at Stellenbosch University. He did his Ph.D. on performance prediction on natural draft cooling towers under the influence of atmospheric temperature inversions.

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Discover seminar with Bob Koch. July 5, 2024, À¦°óSMÉçÇø Engine, 12-1 pm

Abstract:

To quickly reduce CO2 in the heavy-duty trucking sector, it is proposed to retrofit diesel trucks with hydrogen fueling resulting in a hydrogen diesel dual fuel engine. Steady state experimental results from engine testing to maximize the hydrogen usage while investigating the effect on exhaust emissions and combustion metrics are investigated and promising hydrogen energy replacement rates of up to 85% at one third engine load are achieved. Then, a control methodology of machine learning control which is a combination of model predictive control and machine learning is briefly described. This control is then implemented on the experimental engine using low-cost hardware and allows for transient engine load tracking under the imposed constraints on emissions and maximum pressure rise rates. The outlook for the control methodology, which seems to hold promise for constrained engineering systems, is described as it is also being applied to different applications.

Bio:

C. R. (Bob) Koch received his B.S. degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada in 1985, and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, in 1986 and 1991, respectively. From 1991 to 1992 and from 1994 to 2001 he worked at Daimler-Benz/Daimler-Chrysler in Stuttgart, Germany in powertrain and internal combustion engine control. During 1992 to 1994 he worked for General Motors at the powertrain control center. In 2001, he joined the Mechanical Engineering Department of the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada, where he is a Professor.

His research interests include vehicle propulsion systems, controls, machine learning control, sensors for mobile emission measurement and air quality, mechatronics, and control of distributed parameter systems. Prof. Koch is currently an Associate Editor for the Mechatronics Journal (Elsevier) and Control Engineering Practice.

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Seminar with Mylene Riva

Not all Canadians can attain socially and materially necessitated levels of domestic energy services to maintain healthy indoor temperatures, meet their needs, and live with dignity—a situation known as energy poverty. Depending on the measure, 6% to 19% of Canadian households face energy poverty with demonstrated health and well-being impacts. This presentation will explore the intersection between energy poverty, housing characteristics, health and well-being generally, and in relation to energy transition programs in the residential sector.

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Rhys Williams seminar on Energysheds, Oct. 17, 2023, Faculty Club

In contrast to the unsustainable and increasingly fragile global, fossil-fuelled, and market-based energy system, an energyshed names a geographic area and governance model in which all power consumed is sustainably resourced and supplied within it, and associated wastes returned to it.

In September 2023 Glasgow’s Infrastructure Humanities Centre ran a series of workshops bringing together and building relationships between multiple academic, public, private, and community stakeholders to think through and perform the capacities of the energyshed as an idea capable of convening diverse interests and perspectives, starting not from technical or economic questions, but rather from questions of desire, value, community, and agency.

This talk describes those workshops, how they were framed and how they went, what ideas came out of them, what the change of starting point allowed, and what the potential of the energyshed might be for achieving a just and sustainable future.

McISCE Discvoer seminar with Ramses Snoeckx from King Abdullah University of Science and Technology.  Topic is Temperature dependent plasma chemical kinetics of non-thermal plasmas for energy applications.  August 1, 2022 from 11-12. In person Wong 1030, online Zoom ID: 442 961 8295

Flyer for Darin Barney seminar

McISCE Discvoer seminar with Ramses Snoeckx from King Abdullah University of Science and Technology.  Topic is Temperature dependent plasma chemical kinetics of non-thermal plasmas for energy applications.  August 1, 2022 from 11-12. In person Wong 1030, online Zoom ID: 442 961 8295

McISCE Discover seminar with Professor G. J. van Rooij from Maastricht University.  Topic is Plasma Technology for a Green Process Industry.  July 11, 2022 from 11-12. In person Wong 1030, online Zoom ID: 442 961 8295

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