The joint research team's project to increase thermal
conductivity in carbon nanotube (CNT) fibers was selected for its
potential to reduce energy demand and greenhouse gas emissions from
high-emitting industrial subsectors and move the nation closer to a
net-zero economy.
HOUSTON, Feb. 6, 2024
/PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- DexMat, a climate tech moonshot company
creating high-performance, low-carbon materials, today announced
that its work to increase thermal conductivity in carbon nanotube
(CNT) fibers with Rice University has
received $1.5 million in U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE) funding.
The DOE Industrial Efficiency and Decarbonization Office funding
is earmarked for projects that will reduce industrial greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions and move the nation closer to a net-zero
economy. DexMat and Rice University's
High Thermal Conductivity Carbon Nanotube Fibers for Improved Heat
Exchange project will do exactly that, by revolutionizing heat
exchange and spurring substantial energy efficiency gains
throughout a cross-cutting array of industries.
Playing an integral role in a wide swath of industries, heat
exchangers can be found everywhere from HVAC and power generation,
to the food and beverage industry and refrigeration, to
pharmaceuticals and aerospace.
The DexMat-Rice research team has already developed — and
recently multiplied production by 20x — Galvorn, a
high-performing carbon nanomaterial offering an abundant,
environmentally-friendly alternative to steel, copper, aluminum,
and other dirty incumbent materials in a host of applications,
including heat exchangers. For this project, researchers will focus
on increasing Galvorn fiber's thermal conductivity to
better-than-copper levels, while demonstrating textile-based CNT
devices for potential use as heat exchanger fins in industrial
applications, with a long-term target of replacing the aluminum or
copper traditionally used with Galvorn.
"Decarbonizing industry is a complex, multi-dimensional
challenge," said Bryan Hassin, CEO,
DexMat. "Most people are unaware of the massive amount of energy
used in chemical refining, water treatment, or manufacturing.
Improving efficiency of heat exchangers reduces the emissions
impact across all these processes, and doing it with sustainable
materials doubles the benefit. We're thrilled that the DOE
recognizes the opportunity we have ahead of us, and we look forward
to realizing it with our partners at Rice."
"The high thermal conductivity and high specific surface area
make Galvorn products appealing for heat exchange applications,"
said Geoff Wehmeyer, Assistant
Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Rice
University. "The goal of this project is to further enhance
the thermal conductivity of carbon nanotube fibers and demonstrate
new textile-enabled CNT heat exchange geometries, with the goal of
improved efficiency and lower emissions in the industrial
sector."
"Creating textile-based heat exchangers allows us to leverage
the strength and flexibility of Galvorn; it's a powerful example of
what makes this material so valuable," said Colin Young, Senior Research Scientist, DexMat.
"Galvorn's unique combination of superior properties means we can
create novel solutions for challenges both old and new."
Recognizing its high-impact potential to help decarbonize the
industrial sector, the DOE included the DexMat-Rice project as
one of 49 recipients in its recent $171 million funding round,
resourced by President Biden's Investing in America Agenda. Of the
$1.5M federal funding, 80% will go to
Rice, 20% to DexMat, to support a
24-month project period.
To learn more about the project, read the DexMat blog
post.
###
About DexMat
We're a climate tech moonshot company that believes carbon is
the problem — and the solution. Our flagship material, Galvorn, is
made entirely of carbon — with the potential to be sourced from
hydrocarbons, renewable fuels, and captured carbon — and vastly
outperforms traditional alternatives like steel, aluminum, and
copper.
We're scaling nanomaterials properties and production, thanks in
part to research by Professor Matteo
Pasquali and his team at Rice
University. We're refining and commercializing the business
with support from Shell Ventures, the U.S. Department of Energy,
NASA, the National Science Foundation (NSF), the United States Air
Force, ARPA-E, and others.
When adopted at scale across industries such as energy,
aerospace, and automotive, Galvorn represents a multi-gigaton
carbon reduction opportunity by creating the building blocks
necessary for a cleaner economy.
"Creating textile-based heat exchangers
allows us to leverage the strength and flexibility of Galvorn; it's
a powerful example of what makes this material so valuable." —Colin
Young, Senior Research Scientist, DexMat
Media Contact
Nikki Arnone, Inflection Point
Agency for DexMat, 1 202-996-7930, nikki@inflectionpointagency.com,
www.dexmat.com
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SOURCE DexMat