Dept. of Energy awards $4.15M to Argonne National Lab to support work with industry

Argonne will partner with companies from across the U.S. on eight efforts.

The U.S. Department of Energy (

DOE

) has announced over $

30

million in federal funding, matched by over $

35

million in private sector funds, for

68

projects that will accelerate the commercialization of promising energy technologies — ranging from clean energy and advanced manufacturing, to building efficiency and next-generation materials.


DOE

‘s Argonne National Laboratory was awarded $

4

.

15

million in federal funds, cost-shared by industry partners in California, Illinois, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia and Wisconsin.




These projects will help us deploy game-changing innovations that position us to win the clean-energy race, while creating jobs and opportunity across every pocket of the country.” — Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm

Argonne’s eight projects include: processing materials for energy storage, processes to convert carbon dioxide to chemicals, improved simulation of industrial processes for increased safety and efficiency, and materials processing to produce fast-reactor fuel alloys.

The awards are supported by the Technology Commercialization Fund (

TCF

), which is managed by

DOE

‘s Office of Technology Transitions.




President Biden is serious about making sure America corners the clean-energy market — and that means we need to work with our nation’s savviest entrepreneurs to fast-track solutions from

DOE

‘s National Labs into commercial-ready technologies,” said Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm.



These projects will help us deploy game-changing innovations that position us to win the clean-energy race, while creating jobs and opportunity across every pocket of the country.”

Argonne researchers whose projects received

2021

funding are:

  • Nathaniel Hoyt: Application of advanced materials processing to enable direct production of fast reactor fuel alloys ($

    1

    ,

    000

    ,

    000

    in partnership with Oklo Inc., Sunnyvale, California)
  • Di-Jia Liu: Highly efficient electrocatalysts for direct conversion of

    CO



    2


    to chemicals ($

    250

    ,

    000

    ; in partnership with CongiTek, Glenview, Illinois; BiomassOne, White City, Oregon; Beam Suntory, Chicago; and Verde

    LLC

    , Stoughton, Massachussetts)
  • Daniel O’Grady: Capability enhancements for system-level thermal hydraulic modeling of lead fast reactors ($

    250

    ,

    000

    in partnership with Westinghouse Electric Company, Pittsburgh)
  • Pinaki Pal: A deep-learning-enabled fast and robust chemistry solver for reacting flow simulations ($

    250

    ,

    000

    in partnership with Convergent Science, Madison, Wisconsin)
  • Subramanian K. R. Sankaranarayanan: Multiscale manufacturing design tool based on machine learning workflow ($

    250

    ,

    000

    in partnership with Sentient Science, Buffalo, New York)
  • Nicolas Stauff: Enhancement of PyARC for lead fast reactor design and modeling ($

    450

    ,

    000

    in partnership with Westinghouse Electric Company, Pittsburgh)
  • Adrian Tentner:

    FIVSIM

    – an accurate and efficient code for the industrial simulation of flow-induced vibrations ($

    1

    ,

    500

    ,

    000

    in partnership with Framatome, Lynchburg, Virginia)
  • Yuepeng Zhang: Fast thermal processing of ceramic nanomaterials for energy storage applications ($

    200

    ,

    000

    in partnership with

    NCC

    Nano

    LLC

    , Austin, Texas, and NovaCentrix, Austin, Texas

The full list of this year’s

TCF

selections and the private-sector partners can be found on the

Office of Technology Transitions website

.

###

To learn how your company might work with Argonne, contact

[email protected]

“.


Argonne National Laboratory

seeks solutions to pressing national problems in science and technology. The nation’s first national laboratory, Argonne conducts leading-edge basic and applied scientific research in virtually every scientific discipline. Argonne researchers work closely with researchers from hundreds of companies, universities, and federal, state and municipal agencies to help them solve their specific problems, advance America’s scientific leadership and prepare the nation for a better future. With employees from more than

60

nations, Argonne is managed by

UChicago Argonne,

LLC


for the

U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science

.


The U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science

is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit

https:/

/

energy.

gov/

science

.

This part of information is sourced from https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2021-07/dnl-doe072221.php

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