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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2003. Novel Approaches to Carbon Management: Separation, Capture, Sequestration, and Conversion to Useful Products: Workshop Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10699.
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Appendix A
Workshop Participants

LISTINGS BY SESSION

Plenary Session (speakers)

Martha A.Krebs,* Science Strategies, Session Chair

Scott D.Barnicki, Eastman Chemical Company

Sally M.Benson, Lawence Berkeley National Laboratory

Charles Christopher, BP America, Inc.

Scott M.Klara, National Energy Technology Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy

Michael K.Knaggs, National Energy Technology Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy

Dale F.Stein, Michigan Technological University at Houghton (retired),* Committee Chair

Robert Williams, Princeton Environmental Institute, Princeton University

Group 1—Advanced Separations Techniques

Ramon Espino,* University of Virginia, Session Chair

Rakesh Agrawal, Air Products and Chemicals, Inc.

Scott D.Barnicki, Eastman Chemical Company

Earl R.Beaver, Practical Sustainability

Liang-Shih Fan, The Ohio State University

Hugh. W.Hillhouse, Purdue University

W.S.Winston Ho, The Ohio State University

Kevin G.Joback, Molecular Knowledge Systems, Inc.

Harold Hing Chuen Kung,* Northwestern University

M.Douglas LeVan, Vanderbilt University

Nathan S.Lewis, Caltech Chemistry

Andreas A.Linninger, University of Illinois at Chicago

Raul F.Lobo, University of Delaware

Edward J.Maginn, University of Notre Dame

Richard Noble, University of Colorado

Babatunde A.Ogunnaike, University of Delaware

David Sholl, Carnegie Mellon University

Jeffrey Siirola,* Eastman Chemical Company

Peter Smirniotis, University of Cincinnati

Michael J.Therien, University of Pennsylvania

Michael Tsapatsis, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Robert Williams,* Princeton University

Group 2—Advanced Subsurface Technologies

John L.Hill III,* UTD Incorporated, Session Chair

Jay J.Ague, Yale University

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2003. Novel Approaches to Carbon Management: Separation, Capture, Sequestration, and Conversion to Useful Products: Workshop Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10699.
×

Sally M.Benson, Lawence Berkeley National Laboratory

Craig M.Bethke, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Penelope J.Boston, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology

Corale Brierley,* Brierley Consultancy LLP

Peter Dowden, consultant

Charles Fairhurst, Itasca Consulting Group, Inc.

William (Bill) L.Fisher, The University of Texas, Austin

J.Brent Hiskey, College of Engineering and Mines, University of Arizona

John D.Humphrey, Colorado School of Mines

Martha Krebs,* Science Strategies

Jared R. “Tuck” Leadbetter, California Institute of Technology

Gregory J.Olson, Little Bear Labs, Golden, Colorado

Franklin M. “Lynn” Orr, Jr., Stanford University

Nino S.Ripepi, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Michael Q.Pilson,* University of Rhode Island

Group 3—Advanced Geochemical Methods

David Keith,* Carnegie Mellon University, Session Chair

Marc Baum, Oak Crest Institute of Science

Peter C.Burns, University of Notre Dame

Ananda Chakrabarty,* University of Illinois, College of Medicine

Ronald C.Cohen, University of California, Berkeley

John William Costerton, Montana State University, Bozeman

Michael Hoffmann, California Institute of Technology

Kenneth S.Johnson, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute

Fred Krambeck,* Johns Hopkins University

Klaus Lackner, Columbia University

Robert A.Larossa, E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company

Peter C.K.Lau, Biotechnology Research Institute, National Research Council Canada

Satish Myneni, Princeton University

Mark Pasmore, Montana State University, Bozeman

Eliora Ron, Tel Aviv University

Daniel P.Schrag, Harvard University

Jennie C.Stephens, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University

John W.Valley, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Lisa Welp, California Institute of Technology

Group 4—Novel Niches

George M.Hidy,* Envair/Aerochem, Session Chair

Thomas Anthony,* GE Corporate Research and Development

John R.Benemann, Consultant

Toby Bradshaw, University of Washington

R.Malcolm Brown, Jr., University of Texas, Austin

John B.Carberry,* E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2003. Novel Approaches to Carbon Management: Separation, Capture, Sequestration, and Conversion to Useful Products: Workshop Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10699.
×

Zhong-Ying Chen, Science Applications International Corporation

Vincent L.Chiang, North Carolina State University

Gary Coleman,* University of Maryland

Rathin Datta, Argonne National Laboratory

Evan Delucia, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

James Economy, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

James G.Ferry, Pennsylvania State University

Richard C.Flagan, California Institute of Technology

Michael Frenklach, University of California, Berkeley

John Halloran, University of Michigan

Mark Holtzapple, Texas A&M University

Dale W.Johnson, University of Nevada, Reno

Louis Pitelka, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science—Appalachian Laboratory

Tony Sinskey, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Dwain Spence, Simteche

Steven A.Tysoe, GE Global Research Center

J.Gregory Zeikus,* Michigan State University

Hans Ziock, Los Alamos National Laboratory

*  

Member of NRC Committee on Novel Approaches to the Management of Greenhouse Gases from Energy Systems.

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2003. Novel Approaches to Carbon Management: Separation, Capture, Sequestration, and Conversion to Useful Products: Workshop Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10699.
×
Page 30
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2003. Novel Approaches to Carbon Management: Separation, Capture, Sequestration, and Conversion to Useful Products: Workshop Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10699.
×
Page 31
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2003. Novel Approaches to Carbon Management: Separation, Capture, Sequestration, and Conversion to Useful Products: Workshop Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10699.
×
Page 32
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The National Research Council's (NRC's) Committee on Novel Approaches to the Management of Greenhouse Gases from Energy Systems held a workshop at the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center in Irvine, California, on February 12-14, 2003, to identify promising lines of research that could lead to currently unforeseen breakthroughs in the management of carbon from energy systems. The information identified by participants in the workshop will be used by the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) Office of Fossil Energy (FE) to award grants for new research in carbon management.

During the workshop, invited participants from a variety of disciplines contributed their expertise and creativity to addressing the problem of carbon management. The ideas developed during the workshop were synthesized into this report by the committee, which oversaw the organization and execution of the workshop. However, this workshop summary does not contain any committee conclusions or recommendations, but simply reports on research areas that were identified as promising during the workshop discussions. The purpose of the workshop, as noted, was to identify novel approaches to the management of carbon from energy systems.

The workshop is part of a project conducted by the NRC for DOE's Office of Fossil Energy (DOE/FE). DOE/FE will consider the workshop report as it develops a solicitation to be issued in spring 2003. The solicitation will call for research proposals on enabling science and technology research on novel approaches for the management of carbon from energy systems.

Chapters 2 through 6 of this report summarize the most promising new ideas on carbon management identified by each of the four subgroups at the workshop. In the respective chapters, the ideas are described, their significance is explained, and research opportunities are listed. Each chapter includes a statement of the scientific and engineering challenges related to its topic. Chapter 6 includes crosscutting issues not specific to one of the four subgroups. The chapters themselves do not include detailed analysis regarding feasibility, energy and mass balance, and so forth, as the workshop's time and scope did not permit this; it is assumed such analyses will be carried out in the research proposals that DOE funds.

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