Forskere kan teste deres teorier i stor skala i GreenLab Skive. Foto: GreenLab.

Research grant for testing new energy solutions

Wednesday 22 Feb 23
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Contact

Sebastian Nis Bay Villadsen
Senior Project Manager
DTU Chemical Engineering
Five new research projects to develop new ways of producing, sharing, and storing energy.

Researchers from five research projects will be testing and demonstrating solutions for producing, sharing, and storing energy. This will take place in the green industrial park GreenLab Skive, together with DTU and other Danish universities, where researchers can test their theories on a large scale. The projects will help solve some of the climate challenges facing Denmark and the world.

 

The funding comes from a grant of DKK 20 million, which VILLUM FONDEN granted in 2021 to boost a new national research and demonstration platform, headed by GreenLab and DTU. The research projects constitute the third round of donation—and a total of 12 research projects are now underway in the research park.

 

”The new projects generally have two different focus areas: Rethinking the way energy is produced, shared, and stored—in industrial parks as well as in society at large—and optimizing the way green industrial parks such as GreenLab are developed. Both aspects are important if we are to find new ways in the green transition,” says Thomas Hagelund Helsgaun, COO, GreenLab.

 

New solutions to complex problems

GreenLab works with so-called mission-driven research. This means tackling some of society's most important and complex issues requiring innovative solutions. The focus is on new energy systems, circular economy, and how to run industry in the most sustainable way.

 

”At GreenLab Skive, we develop new technologies, new ways of thinking circularly, and new forms of collaboration between public and privatestakeholders This is necessary to support the green transition,” says DTU President Anders Bjarklev.

 

”The collaboration not only gives DTU researchers and students unique opportunities to carry out projects of great scientific quality. They can also test, optimize and demonstrate innovative solutions on a scale that can serve as direct inspiration for the implementation of tomorrow’s energy systems.”

 

Four of the new projects originate from DTU, and the last one comes from Aalborg University.

 

 

Five research projects

1.     The ICEIS project investigates how excess heat in one industrial unit can cover the cooling needs of another.

Contact: Brian Elmegaard, Professor, Head of Section, Department of Civil and Mechanical Engineering, Thermal Energy, DTU Construct: brel@dtu.dk

 

2.     The project Synergizing water, heat and industry for a sustainable energy transition with Power-to-X investigates whether purified industrial wastewater can be used as a water supply for Power-to-X in a world where scarcity of water is an increasing problem.

Contact:Wenjing Angela Zhang, Associate Professor, DTU Sustain: wenz@env.dtu.dk

 

3.     The Honore project investigates whether it is possible to use electrochemistry to neutralize unpleasant odours from a given industry. It will be tested whether smells from industrial processes in GreenLab can be reduced.

Contact:Sebastian Nis Bay Villadsen, Senior Project Manager, PhD, DTU Chemical Engineering: snbvi@kt.dtu.dk

 

4.     The Locomutive project investigates whether it is possible to develop a transparent market model for industrial symbioses and their local areas.

Contact: Amjad Anvari Moghaddam, Associate Professor, AAU Energy: aam@energy.aau.dk

 

5.     The Pump it Up project investigates how the temperature of waste heat from industry can be raised to higher temperatures, so it can be utilized for supplying e.g. steam, district heating or cooling.

Contact: Kai Knobloch, PhD student, DTU Energy: Kaikn@dtu.dk

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