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Science for Energy Technology Strengthening the Link between Basic Science and Industry. George Crabtree Argonne National Laboratory Alexis Malozemoff American Superconductor Corporation Co-chairs. The Full Report: Outline Priority Research Directions User Facilities
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Science for Energy Technology Strengthening the Link between Basic Science and Industry George Crabtree Argonne National Laboratory Alexis Malozemoff American Superconductor Corporation Co-chairs The Full Report: Outline Priority Research Directions User Facilities Opportunities to Strengthen the Links Next Steps BESAC Meeting March 2, 2010 Bethesda, MD
Science for Energy Technology - the Full Report • Executive Summary • Introduction • Energy Science and Technology Spectrum (Modified Five Column Chart) • The Science for Energy Technology Workshop • Panel Reports • Panel 1. Solar energy – Coordinator Charles Gay, Advanced Materials • Panel 2. Advanced Nuclear Technologies - Coordinator Kurt Edsinger, EPRI • Panel 3. Carbon Sequestration – Coordinator Richard Esposito, Southern Company • Panel 4. Electricity Storage – Coordinator Bart Riley, A123 Systems • Panel 5. Electricity Delivery – Coordinator Thomas Schneider, NREL • Panel 6. Advanced Lighting - Coordinator: Bernd Keller, Cree • Panel 7. Biofuels – Coordinator Gregory Powers, Verenium • Panel 8. Efficient Energy Generation and Use - Om Nalamasu, Advanced Materials • Panel 9. DOE User Facilities – Coordinator Simon Bare, UOP • Priority Research Directions • Scientific User Facilities • Opportunities for Strengthening the Link between Basic Research and Industry • Conclusion • Recommendations
SciTech Priority Research Directions • Panel 1: Solar Electricity • Coordinator: Charles Gay, Applied Solar • Fundamentals of Materials and Interfaces in Photovoltaics • Advanced Photovoltaic Analysis and Computational Modeling for Up-scaling • Photovoltaic Lifetime and Degradation Science • Panel 2: Advanced Nuclear Energy • Coordinator: Kurt Edsinger, EPRI • Materials Degradation Mechanisms • Advanced Irradiation Effects Scaling • Back End of the Fuel Cycle • Panel 3: Carbon Sequestration • Coordinator: Richard Esposito, Southern Co. • Extraction of High Resolution Information from Subsurface Imaging and Modeling • Understanding Multi-scale Dynamics of Flow and Plume Migration • Understanding Millennium Timescale Processes from Short Timescale Experimentation • Panel 4: Electricity Storage • Coordinator :Bart Riley, A123 Systems • Identification and Development of New Materials • Invention of New Architectures for Energy Storage • Understanding and Controlling Heterogeneous Interfaces • Identification and Development of New Tools • Panel 5: Electric Power Grid Technologies • Coordinator: Thomas Schneider, NREL • Power Electronic Materials • High Power Superconductors • Electric Insulating and Dielectric Materials • Electrical Conductors • Panel 6: Advanced Solid State Lighting • Coordinator: Bernd Keller, Cree • White Light Emission Through Wavelength Conversion • High Efficiency Emission at High Current Density and Temperature • Organic Light Emitting Diode Materials and Structures • Panel 7: Biofuels • Coordinator: Gregory Powers, Verenium • Diversity of Biomass and Its Intermediates in the Manufacture of Biofuels • Mass Transport Phenomena in Conversion of Biomass to Biofuels • Biomass Catalyst Discovery, Characterization and Performance • Panel 8: Efficient Energy Generation and Use • Coordinator: Om Nalamasu, Applied Materials • Enabling Materials Technologies for Renewable Power • Fuel Cell Materials Understanding and Discovery • Dynamic Optical and Thermal Properties of Building Envelopes
Panel Written Report Chapters (post workshop) • Part I: Panel Summary Report (up to 6 pages, stands alone from PRDs) • Executive Summary (1-2 paragraphs) • Body of Report • Role of topic in national energy picture • Status of present and ultimate industrial technology deployment • Broad context/background for the three Priority Research Direction • Brief description of PRDs • Part II: Priority Research Directions (up to 3 pages each, stands alone from Panel Summary Report) • Problem Statement (a few sentences describing the problem) plus context/background • Executive Summary • industry need, scientific challenge, research direction, and potential impact • Context/background for PRD • Industry Need (upper left of quad chart) • Explicit discussion of industry need and why science is needed to address it • Scientific Challenges (upper right of quad chart) • Specific technical questions and brief discussion of why they’re significant • Research Directions (lower left of quad chart) • A few enumerated possible research projects described in ~ one paragraph/each • Potential Impact (lower right of quad chart) • Discuss how solving this problem impacts present/ultimate industry deployment
SciTech Priority Research Directions • As presently envisioned, full report amplifies messages of concept report • Fills in technical details: • Overall drivers for each panel area • Descriptions of PRDs • Industry need • Scientific challenges • Research Directions • Impact • More complete discussion of • User facility opportunities • Opportunities to strengthen basic research/industry link
Next Steps for Priority Research Directions • Update PRDs periodically • Additional Science for Energy Technology workshops? • Develop PRDs for each sector in more detail • Develop and enhance basic research guided by SciTech PRDs • EFRCs, Innovation Hubs, new solicitations
User Facilities • Should clean energy research be made a priority? • Similar to special accommodation for structural biology? • Should industry users be given special support? • Should the proposal-use delay be shortened? • Can more uniform access procedures be developed? • Should the scattering and nanoscience centers reach out to clean energy research and to industry differently? • Should stronger relationships between facilities and industry be developed? Advisory boards, shared events, . . .
Opportunities to Strengthen the Science–Industry Link • Communication • Barrier: differing objectives and styles • Overcome by sustained interaction • Workshop: a promising opening • Need to reach out: • Industrial participation on advisory boards • Industry speakers at BES contractor meetings • Outreach function • Larger industry role in BESAC
Opportunities to Strengthen the Science–Industry Link • Collaboration • Find challenges that exploit basic science to advance industrial performance • Expand work on SciTech PRDs • Funding incentive / mechanism needed to promote collaboration • Consortia for common problems • Academia-national laboratory-industry exchange programs • Resolving intellectual property requires balanced recognition • of legitimate needs of both sides • Identify standard framework for agreements
Opportunities to Strengthen the Science–Industry Link • Workforce • Collaborative research projects • Young investigator awards in energy space • Student and postdoctoral internships in industry • Exchange visits across university-national labs-industry
Questions for Discussion • Next steps? • Concept report: finalized and issued - MarchFull report: draft completed April/May, presented to BESAC August 5, 6. • Brief Office of Science – Brinkman • Outreach • DOE- BES, technology offices, user facilities, upper management • Congressional staffers • Industry • Wider technical and non-technical audiences?