A dozen clean energy technologies that enable everything from lightweight, fuel-sipping cars to the expansion of renewable energy and cleaner fossil fuel use are getting a boost at the U.S. Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
DOE is awarding PNNL about $4.4 million to bring the 12 technologies closer to commercial use, according to an announcement from DOE's Office of Technology Transitions about the first DOE-wide grants from its Technology Commercialization Fund. Companies partnering with PNNL to advance these technologies will also provide matching support, while PNNL will provide funding from its technology licensing income to support projects not involving industrial partners. PNNL is among 12 DOE national labs receiving a total of nearly $16 million to advance 54 different lab-developed technologies through the grant announcement.
"Deploying new clean energy technologies is an essential part of our nation's effort to lead in the 21st century economy and in the fight against climate change," says Lynn Orr, DOE's undersecretary for science and energy. "The funds announced today will help to accelerate the commercialization of cutting-edge energy technologies developed in our national labs, making them more widely available to American consumers and businesses."
PNNL's twelve winning technologies, how they could be used, the lead PNNL researchers involved, and their partner organizations are as follows:
* Bob Wegeng and Richard Zheng, with STARS LLC, Southern California Gas Company, Infinia Technology Corp., Barr Engineering, and Diver Solar LLC
* James Amonette and Josef Matyas
* Daniel Deng, with Advanced Telemetry Systems Inc., Idaho Power Company, and Grant County Public Utilities District
* Kenneth Ross
* Piyush Upadhyay, with Honda R&D Americas and Alcoa Inc.
* Glenn Grant, with General Motors
* Yuri Makarov and Pavel Etingov, with California Independent System Operator and AWS Truepower
* David Reed, with ITN Energy Systems
* Wu Xu, with Farasis Energy Inc. and Navitas Systems
* David Reed, with Praxair
* Jeff Stevenson, with Protonex
* Yeong-Shyung "Matt" Chou, with LG Fuel Cell Systems Inc.
A full list of all of the winning Technology Commercialization Fund-supported projects is available on DOE's Office of Technology Transitions website.
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