Penn State Energy and Environment News

Microgrids, major changes: Professor leading effort to redesign power grid

| psu.edu

When Hurricane Sandy hit the eastern seaboard in 2012, entire city skylines went completely black with the curious exception of a few small areas still emitting light, thanks to their use of combined heat and power systems, a key component to microgrids. Jim Freihaut, professor of architectural engineering in the Penn State College of Engineering, sees these microgrids not as exceptions but as the norm of the future.

New IEE leaders mindful of energy, environmental challenges

| psu.edu

Bruce Logan and Erica Smithwick have been named associate directors for the Institutes of Energy and the Environment.

Sense of smell, pollution and neurological disease connection explored

| psu.edu

A consensus is building that air pollution can cause neurological diseases such as Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease, but how fine, sooty particles cause problems in the brain is still an unanswered question. Now a team of Penn State researchers, using mice, have found a possible way, but more research is still needed.

College of Engineering announces faculty promotions

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Fourteen Penn State College of Engineering faculty members have been selected for promotions, effective July 1, 2019.

Strategic plan seed grant supports green stormwater infrastructure research

| news.psu.edu

A proposal that will support the development of a living laboratory for green stormwater infrastructure research, education and innovation at Penn State is among the latest initiatives to receive funding through the University’s Strategic Plan Seed Grant program.

Penn State promotions in academic rank, effective July 1, 2019

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The following is a list of academic promotions for tenured and tenure-line faculty members at Penn State, effective July 1.

Civil and environmental engineering announces tenure for five faculty members

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Five Penn State Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering faculty members have been selected for promotion and/or tenure, effective July 1, 2019.

Engineering professor awarded $1.1M grant to increase efficiency of organic LEDs

| psu.edu

Chris Giebink, associate professor of electrical engineering at Penn State, has been awarded a two-year, $1.1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy for his research in organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs). The research is focused on increasing the efficiency of OLEDs used for room lighting.

Harvesters of Light

| psu.edu

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.—They fan out into lily-pad-shaped disks, branch haphazardly like the antlers of deer, and hold fast to the sea floor in squat little spheres. Corals come in many shapes and sizes—and this diversity in form is driven by sunlight.

Penn State EnvironMentors team wins first place in national competition

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A team of Penn State faculty, students and local high schoolers took first place at the 2019 EnvironMentors National Science Fair in Washington, D.C. EnvironMentors is a program that pairs university faculty and undergraduates with underrepresented high schoolers who want to gain research experience before college.

Faculty and students honored at college's annual awards banquet

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The College of Earth and Mineral Sciences celebrated exceptional students and faculty for their academic excellence, service and leadership during its annual Wilson Awards Banquet held at the end of the spring semester.

Penn State team places first in Department of Energy Collegiate Wind Competition

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An interdisciplinary team of 17 Penn State students recently placed first overall in the 2019 Department of Energy Collegiate Wind Competition, a contest designed to challenge undergraduate students to create unique solutions to complex wind energy projects. This is Penn State’s fourth victory in the competition in the last six years.