[E&E seminars] Seminar: Synergism between Nuclear, Hydrogen, Renewable Electricity, and Coal Liquefaction (Nov 29)
Pavel Hejzlar
hejzlar at MIT.EDU
Tue Nov 7 15:20:23 EST 2006
I am pleased to invite you to attend a special CANES seminar by Dr.
Charles Forsberg of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL)
4 - 5 pm, Wednesday November 29, 2006, Room 24-121 of MIT.
Title: Synergism between Nuclear Hydrogen, Renewable Electricity,
and Coal Liquefaction
Abstract:
Different hydrogen production methods have different characteristics.
The defining characteristics of hydrogen from nuclear systems are:
(1) centralized, large-scale production, (2) co-production of
hydrogen and oxygen, and (3) availability of low-cost heat. Those
characteristics may enable the large-scale use of renewable
electricity by providing a low-cost method to provide backup
electricity when the sun does not shine and the wind does not blow.
Centralized nuclear hydrogen couples with large-scale underground
storage of hydrogen and oxygen. That combination potentially enables
the development of low-cost methods to produce intermediate and peak
electrical power. The use of hydrogen and oxygen in power conversion
systems potentially results in much lower costs for intermediate and
peak electricity production than power conversion systems that use
hydrogen and air. In the context of coal liquefaction, coal
liquefaction plants require large inputs of hydrogen, oxygen, and
heat. The inputs match the outputs of nuclear hydrogen production.
Coal liquefaction with nuclear hydrogen avoids greenhouse gas
releases in the production of liquid fuels. For traditional coal
liquefaction plants, more greenhouse gases are released in the
production of liquid fuels than in the burning of liquid fuels.
Dr. Charles Forsberg is a Corporate Fellow at Oak Ridge National
Laboratory (ORNL), received the 2005 ORNL Engineer of the Year Award,
and is the Senior Reactor Technical Advisor for the Nuclear Science
and Technology Division. He is a Fellow of the American Nuclear
Society and received the 2002 American Nuclear Society Special Award
for Innovative Nuclear Reactors. In 2005, Dr. Forsberg received the
American Institute of Chemical Engineers Robert E. Wilson Award in
recognition of chemical engineering contributions to nuclear energy,
including his work on waste management and the hydrogen economy. He
holds 10 patents and has published more than 250 papers. He earned
his bachelor's degree in chemical engineering from the University of
Minnesota and his doctorate degree in nuclear engineering from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dr. Forsberg's current
research activities include the development of a new generation of
advanced nuclear reactors and the basis for a global nuclear-
renewables energy system.
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