Feature Channels: Energy

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Released: 21-Oct-2009 11:00 AM EDT
Costs of Plug-in Cars Key to Broad Consumer Acceptance
University of Michigan

A University of Michigan survey released today shows widespread consumer interest in buying plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs). But the cost of the cars is much more influential than environmental and other non-economic factors as a predictor of purchase probabilities.

Released: 20-Oct-2009 9:15 PM EDT
Synthetic Cells Shed Biological Insights While Delivering Battery Power
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

A simplified model cell not only sheds light on the way certain real cells generate electric voltages, but also acts as a tiny battery that could offer a practical alternative to conventional solid-state energy-generating devices.

Released: 20-Oct-2009 3:30 PM EDT
Sandia Joins Forces with Boeing, Caltrans, Other Industry Partners on Fuel Cell-powered Mobile Lighting Application
Sandia National Laboratories

Sandia National Laboratories, with help from The Boeing Company, the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans), and others, is leading an effort to develop a commercially viable, fuel cell-powered mobile lighting system.

Released: 19-Oct-2009 4:20 PM EDT
Sustainable Energy Initiatives Converge at New Institute at UC Berkeley’s Business School
University of California, Berkeley Haas School of Business

Recognizing the vital role business will play in responding to energy and climate change challenges, the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, is launching a new energy institute. The new Energy Institute at Haas will address both the rising need for research and the growing student interest in the markets, policy, and technology for sustainable energy.

Released: 19-Oct-2009 11:25 AM EDT
Who’s Who in Smart Energy Convene for New York’s Largest and Most Comprehensive Advanced Energy Conference
Stony Brook University

New York’s premiere event to feature the future of modern energy solutions.

Released: 19-Oct-2009 9:00 AM EDT
California Takes the Lead on Energy Efficiency for Existing Buildings with New Regulations and $3 Billion in Funding, Federal Government Not Far Behind
Power Efficiency Corp.

Many trends start in California and then spread eastward across the US. When it comes to energy efficiency and the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, California is taking the lead in retrofitting existing buildings to reduce energy use and emissions.

Released: 16-Oct-2009 1:00 PM EDT
Virginia Tech Lumenhaus Kindles Solar Possibilities
Virginia Tech

An attribute of the Virginia Tech entry in the 2009 U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon is an advanced shutter that slides along the north and south façades, providing insulation and protection from direct sunlight while allowing for indirect, natural lighting, views to the exterior, and privacy to those inside.

Released: 14-Oct-2009 9:00 AM EDT
Smart Grid Information Clearinghouse Web Portal to be Developed
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech will develop a public Smart Grid Information Clearinghouse web portal that encourages use of electricity in an environmentally responsible way. IEEE and the EnerNex Corporation will assist with content, which includes demonstration projects, use cases, standards, legislation, policy and regulation, lessons learned, best practices, and R&D topics.

Released: 7-Oct-2009 4:00 PM EDT
Turning Algae Into Energy
Sandia National Laboratories

Project converts dairy wastes to energy, other products.

Released: 6-Oct-2009 9:00 PM EDT
New NIST Database on Gas Hydrates to Aid Energy and Climate Research
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

NIST has developed a free, online collection of data on the properties of gas hydrates, naturally occurring crystalline materials that are a potential energy resource and also may affect the Earth's climate.

Released: 6-Oct-2009 9:00 AM EDT
Silver Nanoparticles Give Polymer Solar Cells A Boost
Ohio State University

Small bits of metal may play a new role in solar power. Researchers are experimenting with polymer semiconductors that absorb the sun’s energy and generate electricity. The goal: lighter, cheaper, and more-flexible solar cells.

Released: 1-Oct-2009 4:00 PM EDT
Researchers Looking for Catalyst That Allows Plants to Produce Hydrocarbons
Iowa State University

Iowa State University researchers are working to understand how a catalyst allows certain plants and algae to create simple hydrocarbons that could be a new source of liquid fuels. The project is supported by a four-year, $2 million grant from the National Science Foundation's Office of Emerging Frontiers in Research and Innovation.

29-Sep-2009 8:40 AM EDT
New Material May Expand Uses for Solid Oxide Fuel Cells
Georgia Institute of Technology, Research Communications

A new ceramic material described in this week’s issue of the journal Science could help expand the applications for solid oxide fuel cells – devices that generate electricity directly from a wide range of liquid or gaseous fuels without the need to separate hydrogen.

28-Sep-2009 8:00 PM EDT
Coal Mining Hazard Resembles Explosive Volcanic Eruption
University of Michigan

Worldwide, thousands of workers die every year from mining accidents, and instantaneous coal outbursts in underground mines are among the major killers. But although scientists have been investigating coal outbursts for more than 150 years, the precise mechanism is still unknown.

29-Sep-2009 8:00 PM EDT
In Search of Wildlife-friendly Biofuels: Could Native Prairie Plants Be the Answer
Michigan Technological University

An unintended consequence of crop-based biofuels may be the loss of wildlife habitat, particularly that of the birds that call this country's grasslands home.

Released: 21-Sep-2009 3:00 PM EDT
Delaware "Paying" Electric Car Owners
University of Delaware

A newly signed law makes Delaware the first entity in the world to reward owners of electric cars with vehicle-to-grid (V2G) technology for plugging in.

Released: 21-Sep-2009 8:30 AM EDT
$3 Million for Energy Chair at Missouri University of Science and Technology
Missouri University of Science and Technology

Missouri University of Science and Technology's emphasis in energy research and education will soon get a big boost, thanks to a $3 million gift from a retired oil and natural gas executive and graduate of the university.

Released: 17-Sep-2009 3:00 PM EDT
Smaller Isn’t Always Better: Catalyst Simulations Could Lower Fuel Cell Cost
University of Wisconsin–Madison

Imagine a car that runs on hydrogen from solar power and produces water instead of carbon emissions. While vehicles like this won’t be on the market anytime soon, University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers are making incremental but important strides in the fuel cell technology that could make clean cars a reality.

Released: 17-Sep-2009 1:45 PM EDT
Could Sorghum Become a Significant Alternative Fuel Source?
Salisbury University

Could sorghum become a significant alternative fuel source? That’s what faculty from Salisbury University’s Richard A. Henson School of Science and Technology, with Solar Fruits Bio Fuels, LLC, are hoping to find out during a series of trials this fall.

Released: 16-Sep-2009 10:15 AM EDT
Students Navigating the Hudson River With Hydrogen Fuel Cells
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

A group of ambitious Rensselaer students will soon sail up the Hudson River, propelled by pollution-free hydrogen fuel cells and a clear vision for a cleaner, greener future.

Released: 16-Sep-2009 9:00 AM EDT
College Presidents Flock to D.C., Urge Senate to Pass Clean Energy Bill
National Wildlife Federation (NWF)

130 National institutions highlight need to fund comprehensive education and training via climate legislation.

Released: 11-Sep-2009 12:00 AM EDT
Engineering Students Turn Vintage MGB Into Electric Car
University of South Carolina

A 1972 red MGB convertible that was collecting dust and leaves in the garage of an electrical engineering professor is finding new life as an electric car at the University of South Carolina's College of Engineering and Computing.

Released: 10-Sep-2009 3:45 PM EDT
Iowa Power Fund helps Iowa State establish Wind Energy Manufacturing Laboratory
Iowa State University

Iowa State University researchers are working with TPI Composites Inc. and the U.S. Department of Energy's Sandia National Laboratories to study and improve the process used to manufacture wind turbine blades. The researchers' work is supported, in part, by a $2.1 million grant from the Iowa Power Fund.

Released: 10-Sep-2009 2:45 PM EDT
Carbon Nanotubes Could Make Efficient Solar Cells
Cornell University

Using a carbon nanotube instead of traditional silicon, Cornell researchers have created the basic elements of a solar cell that hopefully will lead to much more efficient ways of converting light to electricity than now used in calculators and on rooftops.

Released: 9-Sep-2009 5:00 PM EDT
U.S. Energy Demand on the Decline Due to Population Migration
University of Michigan

As Congress and the White House explore ways to encourage Americans to conserve energy, a new study by the University of Michigan shows that the average individual energy demand for heating and cooling has decreased over the past 50 years.

Released: 8-Sep-2009 2:55 PM EDT
Venture Capitalist Vinod Khosla To Receive Lifetime Achievement Award in Entrepreneurship and Innovation
University of California, Berkeley Haas School of Business

Venture capital and entrepreneurship luminary Vinod Khosla will receive the 2009 Lifetime Achievement Award in Entrepreneurship and Innovation from the Lester Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation at the University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business tomorrow, September 9, 2009.

Released: 8-Sep-2009 2:40 PM EDT
Electrical Circuit Runs Entirely Off Power in Trees
University of Washington

For the first time researchers have run an electrical circuit entirely off power in trees. The findings suggest a new power source for wireless sensors.

Released: 7-Sep-2009 11:00 PM EDT
Making Geothermal More Productive: $10.2 Million Study
University of Utah

University of Utah researchers will inject cool and pressurized water into a “dry” geothermal well during a $10.2 million study aimed at boosting the productivity of geothermal power plants and making them feasible nationwide.

Released: 3-Sep-2009 2:50 PM EDT
Protecting the Power Grid Focus of DOE-funded Research
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech electrical engineers are advancing technologies that rely on the exchange of synchrophasor data among electric utility companies and other electricity entities. Synchrophasors are high-speed, real-time synchronized measurement devices used to diagnose the health of the electricity grid. With synchrophasor data, electric utilities can use existing power more efficiently and push more power through the grid while reducing power disruptions.

Released: 2-Sep-2009 2:15 PM EDT
Greenlighting A Greener World
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute are working to create better, brighter green LEDs, which could lead to a new generation of high-performance, energy-efficient monitors, TVs, and other display devices. The problem, however, is that green LEDs are more difficult to create than anyone imagined.

Released: 1-Sep-2009 4:00 PM EDT
PNNL Awarded $6.8 Million for Marine, River Power Studies
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory will receive more than $6.8 million total over three years to advance the production of renewable power from the movement of oceans and rivers. PNNL will also lead a study looking at the environmental impacts of hydrokinetic and marine energy, which includes tidal and wave power.

Released: 28-Aug-2009 8:00 AM EDT
University Partners with SmartSynch to Lower Campus Power Consumption
University of Mississippi

SmartSynch Inc., a smart grid infrastructure company using Internet protocol via wireless networks, is partnering with the University of Mississippi to reduce the power consumption of campus buildings while publishing real-time results for the general public on Facebook, Twitter and RSS feeds.

Released: 26-Aug-2009 4:30 PM EDT
Marine Viruses May Contribute to Ocean Energy
American Technion Society

New research on marine viruses could change calculations of how energy is generated in the oceans, and might someday inspire new designs for better batteries and other photoelectric energy sources.

Released: 25-Aug-2009 9:00 PM EDT
Safer, Denser Acetylene Storage in an Organic Framework
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

The century-old challenge of storing and transporting acetylene safely may have been solved in principle by a team of scientists working at NIST.

Released: 25-Aug-2009 4:50 PM EDT
Taking the Juice for Granted
Homeland Security's Science And Technology Directorate

Most of us take the electric current behind our power buttons for granted, assuming the juice will be there when we need it. But will it? Homeland Security's Science & Technology Directorate is working on a new superconducting cable to make sure it is.

18-Aug-2009 4:30 PM EDT
Researchers Boost Production of Biofuel that Could Replace Gasoline
Ohio State University

Engineers at Ohio State University have found a way to double the production of the biofuel butanol, which might someday replace gasoline in automobiles.

10-Aug-2009 5:00 PM EDT
Renewable Energies Will Benefit US Workers; Shifting to Wind & Solar Could Eliminate 130 Deaths Annually
Medical College of Wisconsin

Expansion of renewable energies should appreciably improve the health status of the 700,000 US workers employed in the energy sector, according to a commentary by Medical College of Wisconsin researchers, in Milwaukee. Their review is published in the August 19, 2009, issue of JAMA.

Released: 13-Aug-2009 5:00 AM EDT
"Cap and Dividend" Study Estimates Impact of Climate and Energy Policies on Families
University of Massachusetts Amherst

Researchers at the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) at the University of Massachusetts Amherst have released a new report, Cap and Dividend: A State-by-State Analysis, jointly published with the Economics for Equity and the Environment Network.

Released: 12-Aug-2009 11:15 AM EDT
Virginia Tech Solar House Team Unwraps the 2009 House
Virginia Tech

Virginia Tech's 2009 solar house team have moved their zero-energy home from the construction site to a public site and revealed its technology online. Completely powered by the sun, other sustainable features include the use of passive energy systems, radiant heating, and building materials that are from renewable and/or recyclable sources.

Released: 11-Aug-2009 9:15 PM EDT
First Report from New Nuclear Energy Standards Group Released
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

NIST and the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) have published a report on the inaugural meeting of the Nuclear Energy Standards Coordination Collaborative (NESCC), a new ANSI Standards Panel, co-chaired by NIST and ANSI, to address the current and future standards needs of the nuclear energy industry.

Released: 11-Aug-2009 9:00 AM EDT
Lean, Mean and Green: Where Emerging Energy Technology Is Going
ASM International

A highly efficient system for generating and distributing energy is lean, mean and green "“ and could be as close as the nearest farm, according to a University of Connecticut professor.

Released: 4-Aug-2009 11:40 AM EDT
Plastics That Convert Light to Electricity Could Have a Big Impact
University of Washington

University of Washington researchers have found a way to measure exactly how much electrical current is carried by tiny bubbles and channels that form inside nanoscale solar cells, paving the way for development of more efficient materials.

Released: 4-Aug-2009 8:00 AM EDT
Plankton Power and RTDC Announce Proposed Algae-to-Biofuels Pilot Facility on Cape Cod
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

A new public-private consortium will produce biofuels from algae. Led by Plankton Power, the consortium includes the Regional Technology Development Corp. of Cape Cod, Mass. Nat'l Guard, Woods Hole Oceanographic Inst., Marine Biological Laboratory, and Cape Cod Commission and will establish a facility to develop cost-competitive algae biodiesel.

31-Jul-2009 4:00 PM EDT
Gasoline-Diesel 'Cocktail': A Potent Recipe for Cleaner, More Efficient Engines
University of Wisconsin–Madison

Diesel and gasoline fuel sources both bring unique assets and liabilities to powering internal combustion engines. But what if an engine could be programmed to harvest the best properties of both fuel sources at once, on the fly, by blending the fuels within the combustion chamber?

Released: 3-Aug-2009 12:00 AM EDT
Green500 List: Overall Efficiency of Supercomputers Continues to Improve
Virginia Tech

The fifth edition of Virginia Tech's Green500 List shows that supercomputers continue to use less power even as their capacity soars. Computers raking in top spots a year ago are falling by the wayside to newer models.

Released: 30-Jul-2009 12:00 PM EDT
Researchers on Chikyu Report Successful Riser-Drilling
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program

For the first time in the history of scientific ocean drilling, researchers aboard the riser-equipped drilling vessel CHIKYU successfully drilled down to a depth of 1,603.7 meters beneath the sea floor into an earthquake-generating zone off the coast of Japan.

Released: 30-Jul-2009 8:00 AM EDT
Stimulus Funds Will Help Researchers Modernize the National Power Grid
University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

Electrical engineering researchers at the University of Arkansas and the University of South Carolina were informed this week that they will receive federal economic stimulus funds via the National Science Foundation to continue and strengthen their efforts to modernize the national power grid. The award will establish an NSF center of excellence, known as an Industry/University Cooperative Research Center.

Released: 29-Jul-2009 3:00 PM EDT
Scientists Show How to Stack the Deck for Organic Solar Power
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

A new class of economically viable solar power cells"”cheap, flexible and easy to make"”has come a step closer to reality as a result of recent work at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), where scientists have deepened their understanding of the complex organic films at the heart of the devices.

Released: 27-Jul-2009 1:00 PM EDT
UC San Diego Installs High-Efficiency Sun-Tracking Solar Panels
University of California San Diego

The University of California, San Diego has begun producing electricity with newly installed solar panels made by Concentrix Solar that automatically track the sun as it crosses the daytime sky and concentrates sunlight onto hundreds of electricity-producing solar cells, each smaller than a shirt button.

Released: 24-Jul-2009 1:45 PM EDT
On Protecting Birds and Bats from Wind Turbines, Cornell Helps Set Research Agenda
Cornell University

Thirty top wildlife scientists"”including five from Cornell"”have announced agreement on some of the highest research priorities to help America's rapidly growing wind energy industry produce much-needed alternative energy while also providing safe passage for birds and bats.



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