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UC Davis has more faculty,
staff and students studying issues related
to hydrogen fuel technology and transportation
than any other university. Many are associated
with the UC Davis Institute
of Transportation Studies. ITS-Davis administers over $6 million
in research contracts and grants,
is staffed by 100 researchers, and specializes
in advanced transportation technologies,
energy and environmental impacts, and travel behavior.
Here is a list of UC Davis experts on hydrogen-fueled transportation. For more
information, contact Sylvia Wright, News Service, (530) 752-7704, swright@ucdavis.edu.
Hydrogen transport in the real world
Hydrogen and other energy sources
Vehicle power systems and technology
HYDROGEN TRANSPORT IN THE REAL WORLD
Future of hydrogen-powered
tranportation
Daniel
Sperling is a leading
international expert on transportation technology assessment, energy
and environmental aspects of transportation,
and transportation policy. He is a UC Davis
professor of civil engineering and of environmental science and policy,
and founding director of the
UC Davis Institute of Transportation
Studies (ITS-Davis). Sperling recently completed service on a National Academy
of Science committee
that issues a major report on hydrogen
and fuel cell vehicles. Sperling is founding chair and an emeritus
member of the Alternative Transportation
Fuels Committee of the U.S. Transportation
Research Board. He serves on advisory committees and boards of directors
of environmentally oriented
organizations and consults for international
automotive and energy companies. He has testified numerous times
to the U.S. Congress and
frequently provides major addresses at
international conferences. Contact: Daniel Sperling, ITS-Davis, (530)
752-7434, sperling@ucdavis.edu.
Mapping a hydrogen-powered
future
Anthony
Eggert, an associate research director at the UC Davis Institute
of Transportation Studies (ITS-Davis), is research manager of the
Hydrogen Pathways Research Program. The four-year program identifies
strategies for the introduction and adoption of hydrogen use in the
transportation sector. It evaluates the technical, economic, business
and policy implications of a hydrogen transportation future, and
engages energy, automotive, investment and government stakeholders.
Its research projects will include the initial deployment of vehicles
and fuel stations; the design of hydrogen fuel stations and distribution
infrastructure; air-pollutant and greenhouse-gas emissions, lifecycle
costs and energy use of hydrogen. Contact: Anthony Eggert, ITS-Davis,
(530) 754-9000, areggert@ucdavis.edu.
Consumer response
to fuel-cell vehicles
Ken Kurani, a research engineer at UC Davis Institute
of Transportation Studies (ITS-Davis), is director of fuel-cell market
research. He leads campus efforts to identify the most promising early
markets for fuel-cell vehicles; educate communities about hydrogen
and fuel-cell vehicles; and recommend designs for consumer-friendly
hydrogen refueling stations. A major element of his current research
focuses on consumer responses to fuel cell vehicles. Two Toyota fuel
cell hybrid vehicles (FCHVs) are leased to UC Davis to support his
three-year research program. Contact: Ken Kurani, ITS-Davis, (530)
752-6500, access@foothill.net.
Environment
and energy analysis of hydrogen vehicles
Mark
Delucchi, a research scientist at the UC Davis
Institute of Transportation Studies (ITS-Davis), evaluates the performance
and economics of hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles. He analyzes the environmental
aspects of hydrogen-powered vehicles for the ITS-Davis Hydrogen Pathways
Research Program. He has written an analysis of the energy and environmental
impacts of a range of transportation systems (for example, commuter
trains vs. buses vs. van pools), a comprehensive and detailed analysis
of the social costs of motor-vehicle use, and headed an ITS-Davis team
that modeled the performance and life-cycle costs of electric vehicles.
Contact: Mark Delucchi, ITS-Davis, (916) 989-5566, madelucchi@ucdavis.edu.
Cleaner trucks
and buses
California will enforce strict new emission standards
for heavy-duty vehicles such as trucks and buses in 2007. The UC Davis
Institute of Transportation Studies (ITS-Davis) is evaluating new technologies
that employ "clean diesel," hydrogen and fuel-cell systems.
In trucks, ITS-Davis is pioneering an effort to reduce diesel emission
during idling through the use of fuel-cell auxiliary power units. ITS-Davis
is also evaluating clean bus technologies that rely on fuel-cell power,
the use of a hydrogen/compressed natural gas (CNG) mixture, and proposed
clean-diesel systems. Trucks contact: C.J. Brodrick, ITS-Davis, (530)
752-4122, cjbrodrick@ucdavis.edu. Buses contact: Marshall Miller, ITS-Davis,
(530) 752-8758, mmiller@ucdavis.edu. HYDROGEN AND OTHER ENERGY SOURCES Hydrogen
energy Joan
Ogden, a UC Davis
associate professor of environmental
science and policy, is co-director of the
Hydrogen Pathways Research Program of
the UC Davis Institute of Transportation Studies (ITS-Davis).
A
2003 transfer to UC Davis from Princeton
University, Ogden is considered by many scholars to
be the premier U.S. analyst of hydrogen
energy. She teaches energy policy, policy analysis and
hydrogen-energy systems, and studies
how the United States might transition from its current transportation
system to one based on hydrogen fuel.
Contact: Joan Ogden, Environmental Science
and Policy, (530) 752-2768, jmogden@ucdavis.edu. Hydrogen
fuel production, fuel-cell buses
Paul Erickson,
UC Davis assistant professor of mechanical and aeronautical
engineering, studies the production
and
use of hydrogen for fuel-cell systems,
including fuel-cell vehicles. He
is a pioneer in research using acoustic-field modulation
to improve
the reformation of hydrocarbon fuels
into pure hydrogen. His current research
involves both fundamental and applied research in the
hydrogen
production
and utilization field. He studies the
reformation of fuels including methanol,
gasoline, diesel and coal, and hydrogen production from
renewable sources. He also studies
prototype
fuel-cell buses for vibration effects
on systems and the general durability of components. Contact:
Paul Erickson, Mechanical and Aeronautical
Engineering, (530) 752-5360, paerickson@ucdavis.edu.
Biomass reformation for fuel cells
Bryan
Jenkins, a UC Davis professor
of biological and agricultural engineering, studies the
use of biomass fuels (such as straw) in energy applications,
including fuel cells. Much of his research concentrates
on understanding the role of inorganic materials in biomass
when it is converted by combustion and gasification to heat
and power. He hopes to increase the efficiency and reduce
the cost of the process. He currently has laboratory studies
as well as full-scale experiments at power plants underway,
many of them with industry and U.S. national laboratories.
Contact: Bryan Jenkins, Biological and Agricultural Engineering,
(530) 752-1422, bmjenkins@ucdavis.edu.
Hydrogen-storage
technology
Joanna
Groza,
a professor of chemical engineering and materials science,
focuses on the processing and characterization of materials
used in fuel cells, supercapacitors, energy storage and
automotive materials. Her interests include nanocrystalline
materials, heat treatment, non-conventional powder consolidation
techniques, superconductors and processing-microstructure-property
relationships. She supervises several UC Davis Institute
of Transportation Studies students who are studying hydrogen
storage technologies, and is involved in the Advanced
Vehicle Power Systems Laboratory. Contact: Joanna Groza,
Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, (530) 752-8825,
jrgroza@ucdavis.edu. VEHICLE
POWER SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGY Alternative-vehicle
propulsion Marshall
Miller, a senior development engineer
at the UC Davis Institute of Transportation
Studies (ITS-Davis), studies
electric and hybrid vehicle
propulsion systems and how to integrate
these systems in vehicles to optimize
performance. He manages the UC Davis
hydrogen refueling station. He is
the technical manager of the Hydrogen
Bus Technology Validation Program,
which operates a hydrogen-fueled
bus in the Unitrans system
serving the UC Davis campus and the
city of Davis. He also manages the
Advanced Vehicle Power Systems Laboratory, where
he studies storage battery, ultracapacitor
and fuel-cell technology. Using data generated in
that lab, he develops computer models
to simulate the performance
of electric and hybrid vehicles using
a variety of propulsion systems.
Prior to joining UC Davis full-time, Miller held a joint
appointment
with ITS-Davis and the Union of Concerned
Scientists, where he studied technology
and policy implications
of fuel cell vehicles and hydrogen
fuel infrastructure. Contact: Marshall
Miller, ITS-Davis, (530) 752-8758,
mmiller@ucdavis.edu. Power
systems for hybrid and
fuel-cell vehicles Andrew
Burke, a research engineer
with the UC Davis Institute of Transportation
Studies (ITS-Davis), has 30 years' experience
studying
electric- and hybrid-vehicle
design and analysis in
industry
(General Electric),
government (Idaho National
Engineering Laboratory)
and academia (Union College and UC Davis).
At UC Davis, Burke directs
the Advanced Vehicle Power
Systems Laboratory and conducts research
and teaches graduate courses on advanced
electric driveline technologies,
specializing in batteries,
ultracapacitors, fuel cells and hybrid
vehicle design. Contact: Andrew Burke,
ITS-Davis, (530) 752-9812,
afburke@ucdavis.edu.
Carbon-supported metals for
fuel cells Bruce
Gates, a UC Davis professor
of chemical engineering
and materials science, is
an expert in catalysis
by metals. He is collaborating
with researchers
at Ford Motor Company on supported-metal
catalysts and with
researchers at Los Alamos National
Laboratory in the evaluation
of carbon-supported metals for fuel cells.
Gates previously
was a research engineer
at Chevron Research and H. Rodney
Sharp
Professor of Chemical
Engineering
and Chemistry at the
University of
Delaware. Contact: Bruce Gates, Chemical Engineering
and Materials Science,
(530) 752-3953, bcgates@ucdavis.edu.
Fuel-cell
materials
Alexandra
Navrotsky, an interdisciplinary professor of chemical
engineering,
materials science,
and chemistry at UC Davis,
manages a large research team that
conducts research in
several areas that are
relevant
to fuel-cell technology.
One such area is thermodynamic
studies of ceramic
materials that could be superior
to those presently
used in fuel-cell construction. Two examples are zirconia-based
solid electrolytes
and doped lanthanum
compounds.
Navrotsky leads a
universitywide
initiative in nanomaterials
as they
relate to society and
environment. She is a member of the
National Academy of
Sciences. Contact: Alexandra Navrotsky, UC
Davis, (530) 752-3292,
anavrotsky@ucdavis.edu. Media contact
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Last updated April 27, 2004
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