Chattanooga
Engineers Club
www.ChattanoogaEngineersClub.org
NEXT
MEETING________________________
Monday
January 25
– Noon –
DOUBLETREE HOTEL, Inspiration Room
(407 Chestnut Street, Chattanooga, TN 37402)
“Nuclear
Power Today and in the Future” - Dr. H. Lee Dodds, UT Knoxville.
Dr. Lee Dodds
will present a brief history of the development of nuclear power in the U.S.
and abroad followed by a summary of recent developments in nuclear power
nationally and internationally including government, industry, education
institutions. His presentation will also include brief comments about U.S.
public opinion of nuclear power, global climate change, renewable energy, and
energy diversity.
Dr.
H. Lee Dodds is Professor of Nuclear Engineering at UT Knoxville. He has been a member of the faculty
since 1970, and Head of the Department of Nuclear Engineering since 1997.
Prior to his employment at UT, he worked for several years for DuPont at
the Savannah River National Laboratory. Dr. Dodds earned his
B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from U.T.
FUTURE
MEETINGS________________________
Monday,
February 1 –
Noon – To be determined.
Monday,
February 8 –
Noon – “Protecting the New Orleans Inner Harbor from Hurricane
Flooding”
Speaker:
Maurice Bandy, Arcadis
Monday, February
15 – 11:30
AM to 1:00 PM — E-Week
Kick-Off Luncheon
UTC
University Center, Chattanooga Room, Speaker TBD, from Volkswagen.
The Monday
E-Week Kick-Off Luncheon is an
opportunity for Chattanooga's engineering organizations to come together at the
start of National Engineers Week, a week set aside for cultivating and
celebrating the engineering profession. For more information about 2010 E Week,
go to http://www.chattanoogaengineersweek.com/?Events
Monday,
February 22 –
Noon – “Sustainability for Enterprises”
Speaker:
Brad McAlister, WAP Sustainability
Monday,
March 1 – Noon
– “Estimating Rainfall from Weather Radar”
Speaker:
Dr. Larry Carey, Earth System Science Center, University of Alabama in
Huntsville
PREVIOUS
MEETING____________________________
Monday,
January 11 –“Renewable Energy Solutions for the Future” - Dr. Sam Weaver
Dr Sam C Weaver spoke about
the enormity of the world energy problem and approaches to address this problem
being developed by two of his companies. He noted that the world’s
energy supply is threatened by the scarcity, cost, and insecurity of fossil
fuels, even while two billion people do not have access to electricity.
Dr Weaver is
less worried about global warming than the sustainability of fuels. He
presented charts which show the cyclic nature of world average temperatures and
greenhouse gas concentrations over the last 400,000 years, but which also show
that both temperature and CO2 concentrations are beginning to exceed
any past maxima.
He noted that
world population is expected to grow from a current 6.8 billion to a peak of 10
or 11 billion. Meanwhile, the per capita energy use worldwide, now less
than 2 kW, is expected to peak at about 12kW, as it has in the USA. He
showed that energy use is closely correlated with the standard of living, as
measured by per capita gross domestic product.
Order-of-magnitude
estimates were shown for remaining years of energy supply under a number of
scenarios, using various technologies. One scenario assumed world energy
usage would be constant at current values; another assumed the current
population, but with average usage increased to 12 kW and a final scenario with
11 billion people using an average of 12 kW each.
Under this
last scenario, remaining fossil fuels would provide only about 10 years supply
and known nuclear reserves would provide only another 15 years of energy
supply. Dr Weaver views nuclear as a bridge technology to enable our
transition to a renewable energy supply, and noted that advanced nuclear
technologies could greatly extend the sustainability of nuclear power.
One of
Weaver’s companies is developing technologies to store solar thermal
energy, and then use Stirling engines to provide heat and electricity as
needed. He estimates that solar thermal will require half the investment
of solar photovoltaic power, and notes that the availability of solar energy is
virtually limitless.
Another of
his companies is developing a low cost process to generate hydrogen from
biomass (such as sawdust or junk mail) at very low cost, potentially $0.30 to
$0.78 per kg Hydrogen. (One kg Hydrogen is roughly equivalent to 1 gallon
of gasoline in energy content.) At this cost, electricity could be
generated at $0.02 to $0.04 per kWh.
MEETING
LOGISTICS_______________________
The
Chattanooga Engineer's Club meets at the DOUBLETREE HOTEL, CHATTANOOGA,
Inspiration Room (407 Chestnut St., Chattanooga, TN 37402). Free parking is
available in the gated parking lot on the south side of the Hotel. The gate
will be open from 11:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Plan to arrive at about 11:30 a.m., if
you intend to park in the limited space available. No additional parking is
available in the pit east of the Hotel on Chestnut Street.
QUESTIONS
and SUGGESTIONS______________
If you have
any questions, items that would be of interest to the Chattanooga Engineers
Club, or suggestions for future programs, please contact Ralph Boroughs by
e-mail at rdboroughs@gmail.com or by phone at 423-227-0412. You can find membership
application forms, references to future programs, historical data, and other
info at: http://www.ChattanoogaEngineersClub.org. To receive future meeting
announcements by email, join the Chattanooga Technology Organization mailing
list at: http://www.ChattanoogaEngineersClub.org/email.
Looking for
details on a local society meeting? Links to local engineering societies
are available to you at: http://www.chattanoogaengineersclub.org/engineer