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the
future of NanoEnergy
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Registration:
18:30-19:00, Conference: 19:00-21:15
Tickets
Where:
Syntens,
De Ruyterkade 5, 1013 AA Amsterdam
[Building of the Chamber of Commerce]
The conference
language is English.
Supporter: Syntens, Innergy Creations
LIVE
WEBCAST at www.webcastingstudio.eu
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While nanotechnology's impact
will be major, if not revolutionary, in many domains, from aerospace to
medicine to computing, its impact in the domain of energy (production,
storage, transmission and consumption) is set to be equally profound but
peculiarly complex.
Touch points in the buzz areas of fuel cells, batteries and solar energy
are important and numerous. Less numerous but potentially equally important
are influences on sequestration, electrical transmission, insulation,
coal liquefaction, geothermal energy and more.
Depending on how the economics pans out, nanotech could drive decentralisation
of power generation (e.g. local solar plus batteries or fuel cells) or
greater centralisation (superconducting fibres). It could support our
battle against global warming (solar, geothermal) or hinder it (coal liquefaction
to power our cars).
Of course, apart from being an unusually complex dynamic, it is also a
hugely important one - the very fabric of the developed world is woven
with cheap, reliable energy. Any substantial loss of this would lead to
disruptions in supplies of food and raw materials, our ability to travel
and communicate and to heat and light our homes, and quite possibly to
global energy wars.
Nanotechnology will help to radically change the existing dynamic, but
how?
Paul
Holister, Nanotechnology &
Energy
Nanotechnology and the
New Energy Landscape
For generations, little has changed in the way the world uses energy.
The very fabric of the developed world is now critically dependent on
a few monolithic fossil-fuel-based systems.
This status quo is under
threat from political instability, environmental worries, and, arguably,
because the oil is simply running out.
At the same time, a wealth
of energy-related developments is emerging from the fertile fields of
nanotechnology.
This collision of cross-pollinating
technologies and geopolitical pressures looks set to lead us into a
strikingly different energy landscape.
Joop
Schoonman,
Professor of Inorganic Chemistry, Dept.
DelftChemTech - Energy, Delft
University of Technology
Nanostructured Materials for Decentralised Power Generation
Advanced solar cells and novel rechargeable lithium-ion batteries are
required for the development of decentralised power production. With regard
to a Hydrogen Economy, the combination of solar cells and commercial electrolysers
for the splitting of water in oxygen and hydrogen is being studied worldwide
to store solar electrical energy in the form of the energy carrier hydrogen.
This energy carrier can be converted into electrical energy in a fuel
cell with water molecules as the reaction product. Innovative devices
for decentralised power generation, based on nanostructured structured
materials, will be presented in this lecture.
Arjen
Vollebregt,
Department Manager,
Gas Turbines & Structural Integrity, Aerospace Vehicles Division,
National Aerospace Laboratory NLR
Nanotechnology in aerospace applications - current
research at NLR
The National Aerospace Laboratory NLR is actively exploring the possible
applications of nanotechnology for aerospace. Currently two application
domains are being researched: thermal barrier coatings in gas turbine
engines and bulk metals. This presentation gives an overview of the pros
and cons of the current state of the art in nanotechnology and a way forward
for the mentioned domains.
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18:30 - 19:00
Registration
19:00
- 20:00
Introduction
by our Moderator
Humberto
Schwab, Director, Club of Amsterdam,
Innovation
Philosopher
Part
I:
Paul
Holister, Nanotechnology
& Energy
Nanotechnology and the New Energy Landscape
Joop
Schoonman,
Professor of Inorganic Chemistry, Dept. DelftChemTech - Energy, Delft
University of Technology
Nanostructured Materials for Decentralised Power Generation
Erik
Middelman,
Director, Co-Founder, NedStack fuel cell technology
BV
Arjen
Vollebregt,
Department
Manager, Gas Turbines & Structural Integrity, Aerospace Vehicles
Division, National Aerospace Laboratory NLR
Nanotechnology
in aerospace applications - current research at NLR
20:00 - 20:30
Coffee break with
drinks and snacks.
20:30 - 21:15
Part II:
Open discussion
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Tickets for Season Events are
....Regular
Ticket: € 30,-
....Discount
Ticket: € 20,- [*]
....Student
Ticket: € 10,-
As a non-for-profit foundation we don't charge
VAT.
How to pay for the tickets?
....a)
Online booking
with credit card:
Ticket
Corner
........www.clubofamsterdam.com/ticketcorner.html
....b)
By bank: send an email with your details,
number of tickets, type of tickets
........and
event name to: ticketcorner@clubofamsterdam.com
........Bank:
Fortis Bank, Club of Amsterdam, Account 976399393,
Amstelveen,
........The
Netherlands, IBAN NL46 FTSB 0976399393, BIC FTSB NL2R
....c)
By
invoice: send an email with your billing
details, number of tickets, type of
........tickets.and
event name to: ticketcorner@clubofamsterdam.com
....d)
At the
registration desk the evening of the
event - unless we are sold out
........earlier:
18:30-19:00
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Syntens
Syntens is a national innovation network for entrepreneurs
that has the objective to increase innovativeness of SME's. Syntens
provides support, matchmaking and consultancy for technological and
non-technological innovation. Syntens strives to enhance the Return
On innovation of dutch SME's.
www.syntens.nl

Innergy
Creations BV
Innergy Creations developes new Internet & Multimedia
driven products and services. Innergy Creations initiates & implements
innovative business cases. We believe that business innovation is all
about balance. Balance of vision, ideas, creativity, business, marketing,
technology and the management of it.
www.innergybv.biz
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Paul
Holister
Nanotechnology & Energy
Paul Holister is a consultant
specialising in, among other things, the commercial and societal impacts
of new technologies. He is currently writing "Nanotechnology and the
Future of Energy", to be published by John Wiley and Sons.
Paul's consulting background
includes many years in the oil and gas sector as a business analyst
and system designer, working for multinationals such as Shell and Oracle.
He was an early entrant
into nanotechnology-related consulting, launching a popular nanobusiness
newsletter in 2000 and writing the well-received Nanotechnology Opportunity
Report in 2002. In addition to nanotechnology-related consulting for
a broad spectrum of businesses, he has been an expert advisor on nanotechnology
to the EU and the UK's Royal Society.
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Prof. Dr.Dr. h.c. J.
Schoonman
Professor
of Inorganic Chemistry, Dept. DelftChemTech - Energy, Delft University
of Technology
Joop Schoonman (1943) is
since 1984 Professor of Inorganic Chemistry. He received his master's
degree in Solid State Chemistry at the Utrecht University in 1967. He
completed in 1971 his Ph.D. Thesis cum laude on the topic "Electrical
Conduction and Polarization of Lead Bromide" under supervision
of Professor Van Santen. He was in 1974 postdoc at Stanford University.
His main research interests are gas phase deposition of nanostructured
materials for innovative solar cells, rechargeable Li-ion batteries,
solid oxide fuel cells, and chemical gas sensors. Moreover, the production
and storage of hydrogen using nano-structured materials has his interest.
His research at Utrecht and Delft has led to 440 publications and he
is co-editor of 8 books and editor of several international Journals.
He was in the period 2002-2006 scientific director of the Delft Institute
for Sustainable Energy.
He performed a couple of administrative positions and has been Dean
of the Faculty. After his dean period he has been visiting professor
at MIT. He is an honorary professor in chemistry (1996) and received
an honorary doctor's degree (2000) at the Transilvana University of
Brasov, Romania, is honorary professor in Physics at the Warsaw University
of Technology (2006) and received an honorary doctor's degree (2006)
at the Ovidius University of Constanta, Romania. He was appointed in
the period 2000-2006 also at Leiden University and is since 2004 visiting
professor at Stanford University. He received several awards, among
which the most prestigious one, received in 2001, The Royal Shell Award
for Sustainable Development and Energy. Last year he was elected the
first Dutch Master in Materials,i.e., the greatest materials scientist
in The Netherlands since 80 years.
www.dct.tudelft.nl/ac/js.html
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Erik
Middelman
Director, Co-Founder, NedStack fuel cell technology
BV
Erik Middelman is director and co-founder of NedStack fuel cell technology
BV, Arnhem, The Netherlands.
NedStack fuel cell technology BV is a producer of PEM fuel cell stacks,
Direct Methanol fuel cell systems and hydrogen production equipment.
Sister company NedStack fuel cell components is producer of components
like bipolar plates and MEA's for PEM fuel cell stacks.
He is also Board member of Fuel Cells Europe, co-founder of the Dutch
Hydrogen Assosiation (NWV) and member of the advisory board of ECN (Biomass
and fuel cells).
His previous experience has been in research & development and production
of advanced composite materials, high temperature polymers, membranes,
non-wovens, electronic products, lithium ion batteries and thin film
solar cells.
www.nedstack.com
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Arjen Vollebregt
Department Manager, Gas Turbines & Structural
Integrity, Aerospace Vehicles Division, National Aerospace Laboratory
NLR
Arjen Vollebregt is the department manager Gas
Turbines & Structural Integrity at the National Aerospace Laboratory
NLR. NLR performs research to develop new technologies for aviation
and space travel, not only from a scientific perspective, but also for
the application of this research in industrial and governmental sectors.
NLR has two locations, one in Amsterdam and another about 100 kilometers
to the northeast in Marknesse.
Arjen's previous experience is in research & development of prognostics
and health management systems that support the sustainment of military
aircraft.
www.nlr.nl
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Humberto
Schwab
Director,
Club of Amsterdam
Innovation Philosopher,
EuroLAB
Humberto Schwab studied at the University of Amsterdam physics and philosophy.
He was active in the field of education during twenty years. He was
an innovator in secundairy and higher education. He works now as an
innovation philosopher in Spain and in Holland. He uses the socratic
dialogue method to analyse practices in business, NGO, education and
government. He organizes innovation labs for all sort of business (energy,
media, food,) to analyse their best futures, starting from deep philosophical
analysis ending with atractive scenarios. Also as an intermedium he
directs philosophy labs between distinct branches.
In Spain he organizes training
in socratic dialogue and in innovative strategies. In PICNIC he moderated
worldwide medialabs. He worked with Rietveld academy students and trains
teachers in socratic coaching, both in EuroLABs.
He developed the futurelab method for immigrant kids in Amsterdam West.
Also he held EuroLABs
for pupils from all over Europe.
The central target is to
get groups into intelligent practice of collaborative thinking. He is
now developing new concepts of contexts of learning.
www.humbertoschwab.net
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Syntens
De
Ruyterkade 5
1013 AA Amsterdam
www.syntens.nl
[Building
of the Chamber of Commerce]
Map
You can download a
map
including route description
Public Transport
Syntens or the Kamer van Koophandel
[Chamber of Commerce] is located at the IJ River.
Coming from the city center you turn left at Centraal Station. It is
10 minutes walking distance.
By Car
From all directions.
From Ringweg A10 West take exit S 102 Westpoort 3000-9000. Follow Transformatorweg,
Spaarndammerdijk, Taamanstraat, Van Diemenstraat, Westerdoksdijk to
de Ruyterkade.
There is a parking behind the Kamer van Koophandel, which can be accessed
from the main entrance.
Alternatively there is a parking garage in front of Centraal Station.
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You can find resources related to this topic in
the sections
about
Books
Articles
Links
Club
of Amsterdam Journal
and for more events
Agenda
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Club
of Amsterdam
Phone +31-20-615 4487
info@clubofamsterdam.com
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