[E&E seminars] Tomorrow: MITEI Seminar Series - Arun Majumdar
Jameson Twomey
jtwomey at MIT.EDU
Mon Apr 13 15:45:40 EDT 2009
This is just a friendly reminder that tomorrow, Tuesday, April 14th,
MITEI proudly welcomes Arun Majumdar, the Almy and Agnes Maynard
Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science Engineering
at UC Berkeley and the Associate Laboratory Director for Energy and
Environment at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Using Science to Innovate in Efficient Energy Utilization
Date: April 14th
Time: 4:15 - 5:45 - Light refreshments to follow
Location: 66-110 (Landau Building, 25 Ames Street)
Abstract
To address the challenges of energy security and climate change, it is
becoming increasingly clear that “business as usual” traditional
approaches to decarbonize the energy supply and to reduce energy
demand are inadequate. We need to create an era of major innovations
in energy conversion, storage and end-use technology that are not only
efficient, but are also scalable and cost-effective. This, in
combination with well-aligned policy, education and economics, can
lead to profound societal changes. Such major innovations are likely
to happen through the fundamental understanding and utilization of
science. In this talk, I will discuss a few examples from my
laboratory where we have used science to address basic needs in
thermal energy conversion, transport, and utilization. Why is thermal
energy important? About 90 percent of the US energy supply is used in
heating and cooling, and about 60 percent of the energy in any power
generation process is wasted as heat! Hence, if we are to address the
needs of the supply and demands sides of energy, we must develop the
ability to manipulate thermal energy. This talk will focus on
fundamental barriers and limits in thermal energy processes that can
only be overcome using science. These include the alloy and amorphous
limits of thermal conductivity in solids, which have significant
bearing on thermoelectric energy conversion; critical heat flux in
phase transitions, which are widely used in power generation and
refrigeration; and new approaches to solar-thermal energy that are
fundamentally different from those developed in the past.
About the Speaker
Professor Arun Majumdar received a B.Tech in Mechanical Engineering
from the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay (IIT-B) in 1985, and a
PhD in Mechanical Engineering from the University of California,
Berkeley in 1989, for research conducted in the laboratory of
Professor Chang-Lin Tien. After being on the faculty of Arizona State
University (1989-92) and University of California, Santa Barbara
(1992-96), he began his faculty appointment in the Department of
Mechanical Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley. He
currently holds the Almy and Agnes Maynard Chair Professorship in the
College of Engineering. In addition to his faculty appointment, he is
the Associate Laboratory Director for Energy and Environment at the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, where he is involved in
creating new initiatives in the area of energy research.
Professor Majumdar served as the Chair of the Berkeley Nanosciences
and Nanoengineering Institute and was also a member of the
Nanotechnology Technical Advisory Group to the President's Council of
Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST). He served as the Council
of Materials Science and Engineering at the Department of Energy and
is a member of the Advisory Committee of the National Science
Foundation’s Engineering Directorate. Professor Majumdar is a
recipient of the Institute Silver Medal (IIT-B) (1985), NSF Young
Investigator Award (1992-97), ASME Melville Medal (1992), the Best
Paper award of the ASME Heat Transfer Division of ASME (1993), Gustus
Larson Memorial Award of the ASME (2001), Distinguished Alumni Award
from IIT-B (2002), and ASME Heat Transfer Memorial Award (2006). He is
a fellow of ASME and AAAS, and was elected to the US National Academy
of Engineering in 2005.
MITEI thanks CERA for its ongoing sponsorship of the Seminar Series.
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