You are here

Chemical Engineering Professor receives $1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to advance clean hydrogen technologies

Top Stories

$500,000 Gift from Dan and Larry Anne Hereford to Support Engineering Center of Excellence

The College of Engineering is excited to announce that Richard “Dan” Hereford (ME ’69) and his wife, Larry Ann, have

Read More ➝

College of Engineering's Distinguished Lecture Series

The College of Engineering proudly hosted the latest seminar in our Distinguished Lecture Series, featuring Dr.

Read More ➝

Greg and Alexis Guidry’s $1.6 Million Gift Fuels Engineering Innovation in the College of Engineering

The College of Engineering is excited to announce that Greg and Alexis Guidry have committed $1.6 million to the Col

Read More ➝

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) awarded a $1 million grant to advance clean energy technologies. The project is led by Dr. Xiao-Dong Zhou, Professor of Chemical Engineering and Director of the Institute for Materials Research and Innovation and Dr. Chee-Hung Henry Chu, Professor, School of Computing & Informatics and Executive Director, Informatics Research Institute who serves as the Co-PI.

Supported by Senator Bill Cassidy, a member of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, the grant will fund the research team in developing high-performance metal-supported solid oxide electrolysis cells and innovative diagnostic methodologies to achieve net-zero or negative emissions.

This is one of 31 projects using the nation’s fossil fuel and power infrastructure for decarbonized energy and commodity production through the development of technologies for the production, transport, storage, and utilization of fossil-based hydrogen.

Click here for Senator Cassidy’s press release or here for KLFY’s news story.

SHARE THIS |