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Headshot of Martin Webler.
Martin Webler, a business management specialist within NETL’s Technology Development Center (TDC), will retire at the end of March. During his 14-year tenure with the Lab he worked by the creed “People make jobs,” helping NETL grow, expand and change with the times.
Large body of water at sunset.
By using software tools developed at the Lab, NETL helped co-author “Modeling Framework for Cost Optimization of Process-Scale Desalination Systems with Mineral Scaling and Precipitation,” which was recently published in the journal ACS ES&T Engineering.
An open in-situ flame.
NETL researchers have completed some of the first in-situ measurements of ammonia-fueled flames. The foundational combustion research will be used to validate computer models needed to design next-generation energy systems using ammonia as a carbon-free fuel.
Pittsburgh skyline.
NETL will showcase ongoing work by researchers from the public and private sectors to identify and address the nation’s greatest energy, environmental and economic challenges during the 2024 NETL Resource Sustainability Project Review Meeting, scheduled for April 2-4 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Houston skyline
NETL experts in the field of carbon management participated in the Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage (CCUS) conference this week in Houston, Texas, where leaders from research institutions, universities and industry demonstrated the ongoing need for skilled petroleum geologists, geophysicists and engineers to help define the future of carbon management.
GE Vernova turbine vanes.
GE Vernova’s Gas Power business, under a cooperative agreement with NETL, has successfully tested an advanced cooling architecture enabled by additive manufacturing (AM) to produce turbine components that can deliver improved performance under higher operating pressures and temperatures — crucial factors for increasing turbine efficiency and reducing greenhouse gas emissions from power plants.
NETL’s Zineb Belarbi, Ph.D. presented with the Joyce Wright Industry Impact Award by the Association for Materials Protection and Performance (AMPP)
Zineb Belarbi, Ph.D., a leading corrosion and electrochemistry researcher at NETL’s Albany, Oregon, facility, was recognized by the Association for Materials Protection and Performance (AMPP) with the Joyce Wright Industry Impact Award in ceremonies held at the association’s annual conference March 6 in New Orleans.
Staff from NETL and the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Fossil Energy Carbon Management (FECM) recently toured the Technology Centre Mongstad (TCM).
Completing an 8,000-mile business trip in just six days can be daunting, but the journey was well worth the effort for a contingent from NETL and the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management (FECM) to ensure key projects supported by NETL remain on track to capture greenhouse gas from industrial sources.
Water
A game-changing award-wining NETL technology that can effectively capture heavy metals from acid mine drainage and municipal water supplies and extract beneficial critical minerals such as aluminum, nickel and rare earth elements (REE) from water, has been granted a U.S. patent, bringing it step closer to wide use throughout the nation.
3 by 3 array of animated fans.
An NETL researcher overseeing construction of the Lab’s Direct Air Capture (DAC) Center recently met with industry and scientific leaders in Switzerland to discuss accelerating the commercialization of critical technologies for removal of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere.