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Contact Us
HiTEC
Montana State University

Director: Lee Spangler

Assistant to the Director: Michelle Leonti

Tel: (406) 994-1658
Fax: (406) 994-2893
hitec@montana.edu
> Research, Creativity and Technology Transfer  > HiTEC
Invited Speakers
HiTEC – MSU Seminar Series

2008

  • October 15 – Randall Gemmen
    Department of Energy/National Energy Technology Laboratory
    Solid Oxide Fuel Cell (SOFC) Research at the National Energy Technology Laboratory
  • September 24 – U. (Balu) Balachandran
    Argonne National Laboratory
    Development of Dense Membranes for Hydrogen Production and Purification
  • April 23 – Hirohisa Aki
    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) in Tsukuba, Japan
  • March 26 – Jiahong Zhu
    Mechanical Engineering Department
    Tennessee Technology University
  • March 19 – Xingbo Liu
    Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering Department
    West Virginia University
  • February 20 – Anthony Petric
    Materials Science & Engineering
    McMaster University, Ontario Canada
  • February 13 – Steven Shaw
    Electrical and Computer Engineering
    Montana State University

2007

  • November 14 – Ling Chen
    Argonne National Laboratory
    Development of Dense Cermet Membrane for Hydrogen Separation
  • November 7 – Michael Badding
    Corning, Inc.
    Corning Inc.’s Electrolyte Supported Multi-cell Device and Stack Technology
  • October 31 – Jeffrey Fergus
    Auburn University, Materials Research and Education Center
    Materials Degradation in Solid Oxide Fuel Cells
  • October 10 – Nigel Sammes
    Colorado School of Mines, Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering
    The Properties and Performance of Micro-Tubular (less than 1mm od) Anode Supported Solid Oxide Fuel Cells and Cube-Type Stacks
  • September 5 – Michael Tucker
    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    Metal-Supported Solid Oxide Fuel Cells
  • April 25 – Fatih Dogan
    Department of Materials Science and Engineering
    University of Missouri-Rolla Single chamber SOFCs Technology
  • March 21 – Subhash C. Singhal
    Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
    Past and future of SOFC technology
  • February 21 – Daniel Mumm
    Chemical Engineering and Materials Science
    University of California - Irvine
    Advanced materials and structures related to SOFC systems
  • January 24 – Aaron Crum
    President, Adaptive Materials Inc.
    Tailored ceramic microstructures for SOFC systems

2006

  • November 29 – Hashem Nehrir
    Electrical Engineering, Montana State University
    Dynamic Modeling and Power/Control Applications of Solid Oxide Fuel Cells
  • October 9 & 10 – Boris Trusov
    Department of Information Technologies & Software, Bauman Moscow State Technical University
    Thermodynamic Calculations and potentially software training
  • October 4 – Anil Virkar
    Department of Materials Science & Engineering, University of Utah
    Ceramics & Low Temperature
  • September 11 – Christian Gindorf
    SIEMENS Gas Turbines - Germany
    An expert in Cr-volatility measurements and currently a high temperature materials scientist for Siemens in Germany
  • April 27 – Michael Krumpelt
    Argonne National Laboratory
    The chromium issue in solid oxide fuel cells
  • March 29 – Larry Pederson
    Energy Science and Technology Directorate, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
    Electrode reactions in high temperature fuel cells, electrolyzers, and sensors
  • March 22 – Scott A. Barnett
    Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University
    Solid oxide fuel cells: new materials and new applications
  • March 8 – Xiao-Dong Zhou
    Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
    High temperature transport and defect chemistry in materials for solid oxide fuel cells

2005

  • December 7 – Steven Shaw
    Electrical and Computer Engineering, Montana State University
    Fuel cell transient recognition control
  • November 16 – Hugo Schmidt
    Physics, Montana State University
    Impedance spectroscopy
  • November 7 – Steven Visco
    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    Tough technology, the development of metal-based solid oxide fuel cells
  • November 2 – Paul Gannon
    Chemical and Biological Engineering, Montana State University
    Enabling inexpensive metallic interconnects for planar SOFCs: an investigation into advanced physical vapor deposition techniques and functional coatings on ferritic steels
  • October 12 – Jiaping Han
    Physics, Montana State University
    Proton conducting ceramics for hydrogen separation membranes and intermediate temperature solid oxide fuel cells
  • October 6 – Eric D. Wachsman
    HiTEC, University of Florida
    The search for a low temperature solid oxide fuel cell; how low can we go?
  • August 30 – Ronald Loehman
    Sandia National Laboratories
    Ceramic composite seals for solid oxide fuel cells
  • April 27 – Meilin Liu
    Center for Innovative Fuel Cell and Battery Technologies, Georgia Institute of Technology
    In-situ characterization of electrodes and interfaces in solid oxide fuel cells
  • April 13 – Stephen Sofie
    NASA Glenn Research Center
    High power density SOFC development at NASA for aerospace applications
  • April 6 – Nguyen Q. Minh
    GE Energy
    Solid oxide fuel cell technology: features and applications
  • March 30 – Steven Simner
    Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
    SOFC cathode development at PNNL
  • March 2 – S. Elangovan
    SOFC operation on JP-8 reformate from a cold-plasma reformer
  • February 16 – Jih-Sheng (Jason) Lai
    Future Energy Electronics Center
    Advanced DC/DC converters for a stationary fuel cell power plant

2004

  • December 7 – Vladimir Gorokhovski
    ASE, LLC
    Chemical & Biological Engineering, Montana State University Surface engineering of metallic interconnects for SOFC
  • November 30 – Lee Spangler
    Director, HiTEC, Montana State University
    The role of HiTEC in the DOE – fossil energy program
  • November 16 – Harlan Anderson
    Electronics Materials Applied Research Center, University of Missouri-Rolla
    Research on the thin electrolyte and the cathode for anode supported solid oxide fuel cells
  • November 9 – Hongwei Gao
    Electrical and Computer Engineering, Montana State University
    A low cost, high efficiency DC/DC converter for the fuel cell residential power system
  • October 12 – Yves Idzerda
    Physics, Montana State University
    Shedding light on interfacial stress in solid oxide fuel cell materials
  • October 5 – Hossein Ghezel-Ayagh
    Fuel Cell Energy, Inc.
    Advances in Direct Fuel Cell/Turbine® hybrid power system development
  • September 28 – Margaret Ziomek-Moroz
    U.S. Department of Energy, NETL
  • September 14 – Hashem Nehrir
    Electrical and Computer Engineering, Montana State University
  • September 7 – Gary Yang
    Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
View Text-only Version Text-only Updated: 1/5/2009
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