The Energy for Sustainability program supports fundamental research and education that will enable innovative processes for the sustainable production of electricity and transportation fuels. Processes for sustainable en...
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Award$300kDeadlineFixedLocationAlabamaTypegrantLevelFederalOpenposted Nov 30, 2010
✦ AI Summary
Who can apply: Federal-level applicants (see eligibility for details).
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Award amount
$300k
Deadline
Fixed
Total pool
$9.2M
About this opportunity
The Energy for Sustainability program supports fundamental research and education that will enable innovative processes for the sustainable production of electricity and transportation fuels. Processes for sustainable energy production must be environmentally benign, reduce greenhouse gas production, and utilize renewable or bio-based resources that are abundant in the United States. The most abundant and sustainable source of renewable energy is the sun. The Energy for Sustainability program emphasizes two themes which harness solar energy to make fuels and electrical power: biofuels,& bioenergy, and photovoltaic solar energy. In addition, this program also supports research in wind and wave energy, sustainable energy technology assessment, and fuel cells. Current interest areas in these sustainable energy technologies are highlighted below.Biomass Conversion, Biofuels & Bioenergy. (Gregory Rorrer) Photosynthetic processes used by plants or algae use sunlight to convert atmospheric CO2 to hydrocarbons which can be processed into transportation fuels. Innovative approaches for the conversion of lignocellulosic biomass to fuels is an interest area of this program, particularly for "third generation" biofuels beyond cellulosic ethanol. Many biological processes for energy production have low volumetric productivity. Engineering approaches for intensification of bioenergy processes is an interest area of this program. Specific areas of interest include: microbial fuel cells for direct production of electricity from renewable carbon sources; process-based, scalable approaches for the biological or bio-mimetic generation of electricity directly from sunlight; hydrogen production from autotrophic and heterotrophic microorganisms; hydrocarbons and lipids from autotrophic or heterotrophic microorganisms.Photovoltaic Solar Energy. (Gregory Rorrer) Solar photovoltaic (PV) devices harvest and convert sunlight directly to electricity. Future PV materials, such as nanostructured semiconductors, plasmonic or photonic materials, and photoconducting polymers, when integrated into a solar PV device stack, have considerable promise for enhancing solar energy conversion efficiency and reducing unit cost. Many photovoltaic devices are fabricated from toxic and non-recyclable materials. Fundamental research on environmentally- benign materials and processes for photovoltaic devices is a strong interest area of this program. The photocatalytic splitting of water into H2 gas and the chemical reduction of CO2 to liquid or gaseous fuels is also an interest area of this program. The generation of thermal energy by solar radiation is not an area supported by this program, but is an area supported by the Thermal Transport Processes program within CBET.Wind and Wave Energy. (Geoffrey Prentice) The United States also has considerable natural sources of energy for the production of electricity, including wave/tidal energy. Fundamental engineering research, supported by modeling and simulation studies, that leads to new processes to efficiently harness these natural sources of energy, particularly wind, wave or tidal energy, for the production of electrical power, is an interest area of this program. Research that focuses exclusively on materials science issues associated with these processes is not an area supported by this program. Energy Technology Assessment. (Geoffrey Prentice) Interdisciplinary approaches for sustainable energy technology assessment which include a fundamental engineering analysis component will be considered by this program.Fuel Cells. (Geoffrey Prentice) Polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) and solid oxide fuel cells convert hydrocarbons to electricity through electrochemical processes. Fundamental research on use of renewable, biomass-derived materials or bio-based materials as feedstocks for fuel cell devices is a particular interest area of this program.
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