WASHINGTON, D.C. – (RealEstateRama) — The Energy Department’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) last night received three R&D 100 Awards, an honor presented by R&D Magazine and considered to be the Oscars of innovation.
The prize in the Mechanical/Materials category was awarded to the EcoSnap-AC Heat Pump System created by Chuck Booten and Jon Winkler from NREL’s Advanced Residential Buildings research group.
The award in the Analytical/Test category went to the Battery Internal Short-Circuit Device developed by Matthew Keyser and Ahmad Pesaran from NREL’s Energy Storage research group.
“We are honored to receive this prestigious award with our collaborators at NASA,” said Keyser. “With the recent lithium battery safety incidents being highlighted in the media, it is imperative to introduce advanced tools such as the ISC to ensure that consumers are safe while meeting their performance expectations for electronics and electrified vehicle applications.”
A North Carolina company, Wolfspeed, won in the IT/Electrical category for the High-Temperature, Wide Bandgap Underhood Inverter developed with NREL, Toyota, and the University of Arkansas’ National Center for Reliable Electric Power Transmission. Kevin Bennion, Sreekant Narumanchi, Gilbert Moreno, Paul Paret, and Doug DeVoto of NREL’s Advanced Power Electronics and Electric Machines research group were part of that project.
Booten and Winkler devised the EcoSnap-AC heat pump as an alternative to window-mounted air conditioning units. The device installs anywhere on an exterior wall, so that people can be comfortable without losing the view from their window. It is also quieter, more energy efficient, heats and cools, doesn’t jeopardize home security, is easy for a homeowner to install in just a few minutes, and can be left in place year-round. The approach divides the heat pump into two separate yet tightly integrated parts, with one external to the home and the other on the interior.
“It’s always gratifying to know that all the extra effort you have put into developing an idea actually resonates with people,” Booten said. “It shows that your vision has some validity.”
The newly patented NREL Battery Internal Short-Circuit Device is the first mechanism able to accurately simulate a true internal short circuit within a battery cell, providing researchers with reliable data to determine how the size, resistance, and location of an internal short circuit will affect safety measures implemented in new battery de