PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Transportation planning goes virtual

2023-12-15
(Press-News.org) Freight transportation is a backbone of the US economy — and a significant contributor to US greenhouse gas emissions. In fact, freight accounts for nearly 10% of annual U.S. emissions,ISE Dan Doulet Faculty Fellow and Professor Xueping Li points out. Li and an interdisciplinary, multi-institutional team have been awarded funding from the US Department of Energy to launch a first-of-its-kind, national-scale undertaking to address freight’s impact on climate change — and climate change’s impact on this vital sector.

Funding from DOE’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) is highly competitive. “Any company, national lab, or university in the country could apply. Only six projects were chosen this year,” Li says. “It’s so exciting to be one of the teams.” As principal investigator, Li is working alongside Assistant Profeessor Hugh Medal and Professor Kevin Heaslip from the Tickle College of Engineering, UT graduate students, faculty from West Virginia University, and researchers from Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

“We want to help reduce freight’s greenhouse gas emissions and help make it more resilient to climate-related challenges and acute disruptions,” Li says. To accomplish this two-part mission, the team is developing a cognitive digital twin for the entire US intermodal transportation network, including roads, rails, and waterways.

“A digital twin,” Li explains, “is a virtual representation of a physical system, like a motor or factory. With it, you conduct what-if analyses and determine how to optimize system performance.” Digital twins are becoming mainstream in some industries; this team is leapfrogging to the next iteration.

“With a cognitive digital twin,” Li says, “you ask your what-ifs, see the impacts in the model, make changes in the physical world … and sensors, cameras, and other technologies feed the evolving real-world data back into the twin. You monitor the system operations, and the twin learns from new data and continues evolving.”

State transportation agencies, city planners, shipping companies, and supply chain professionals use an array of methods and models for flow planning, scheduling, and optimizing for cost efficiency. But, Li says, “There’s a decent chance many people still use spreadsheets or even do the work by hand.” This limits the scale, scope, and speed of transportation planning.

The team’s cognitive digital twin will remove those limitations and enable decision-makers to understand both the tradeoffs and the synergies between competing priorities. “We want users to see all their options and how to best prioritize for time, cost and emissions,” Li says. “They could see that a route planned for trucking could use rail more quickly and with fewer emissions. Or they could find a more fuel-efficient route for the truck, which also costs less. Since this will cover the nationwide system, they’ll see how optimizing for one location or mode of transport affects the big picture.”

The twin will also serve users facing more frequent extreme weather events. “If you need to ship goods from Miami to Boston, but a hurricane is coming up the coast, or it already left behind damaged infrastructure,” Li asks, “what can you do?” The cognitive digital twin will quickly, effectively enable rerouting — and increased resilience.

As the twin takes shape, the team will submit a technology-to-market plan to ARPA-E. “To make an impact,” Li says, “we will translate and transform our research into working prototypes available to industry partners and government agencies.” With that end in mind, the team is forming an advisory board with industry partners to guide the research and development of the twin.

The University of Tennessee invests in research areas that address complex, urgent real-world challenges. Future mobility of people and goods is one such priority area. By earning ARPA-E funding, Li’s team will continue advancing the university’s solutions-oriented leadership in decarbonizing transportation and strengthening the systems that keep the economy running.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Zhou’s new tech has low-income housing covered

2023-12-15
When looking for ways to reduce their carbon footprint, most people think of first of their car, not their house. Surprisingly, however, buildings make up one of the largest energy-consuming sectors of the US economy, accounting for 39 percent of the country’s total energy use. “Heating and cooling are among the most energy-intensive parts of building operations,” said Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering Nick Zhou, who leads UT’s Sustainable and Adaptive Built Environment Group in ...

New framework to identify genetic risk of disease could lead to targeted therapeutics

2023-12-15
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) on patient blood samples are useful for identifying the genetic basis of blood cell traits and their links to common diseases. While previous experiments have focused on characterizing clinical parameters such as cell count, few have evaluated the dynamic effects of factors—such as inflammation, microbiome or medications—on blood cell contributions to disease development and progression. This lack of insight into underlying biological mechanisms behind such chronic progressive conditions has hindered ...

Newly developed material gulps down hydrogen, spits it out, protects fusion reactor walls

Newly developed material gulps down hydrogen, spits it out, protects fusion reactor walls
2023-12-14
MADISON – University of Wisconsin–Madison engineers have used a spray coating technology to produce a new workhorse material that can withstand the harsh conditions inside a fusion reactor. The advance, detailed in a paper published recently in the journal Physica Scripta, could enable more efficient compact fusion reactors that are easier to repair and maintain. “The fusion community is urgently looking for new manufacturing approaches to economically produce large plasma-facing components in fusion reactors,” says Mykola Ialovega, a postdoctoral researcher in nuclear engineering and engineering physics at ...

Tufts University announces Second Annual Cellular Agriculture Innovation Day

Tufts University announces Second Annual Cellular Agriculture Innovation Day
2023-12-14
Tufts University, home to the world’s largest concentration of academic researchers working on cultivated meat, will be hosting its second annual Cellular Agriculture Innovation Day on January 11, 2024. The day-long event will be held at Tufts’ Joyce Cummings Center in Medford, following a year of major developments in the industry — including regulatory approval of cultivated meat in the United States. Bringing together researchers, entrepreneurs, policymakers, and investors, Cellular Agriculture Innovation Day is an opportunity for candid ...

DOE’s Office of Science releases vision outlining the path to advancing fusion energy science and technology

2023-12-14
Washington, D.C. – The Office of Fusion Energy Sciences (FES), at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science, announced the release of its vision, Building Bridges: A Vision for the Office of Fusion Energy Sciences, during the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee hearing on December 13, 2023. This FES vision enables DOE to establish the steps needed to help advance fusion energy, including addressing key science and technology gaps in the supply chain and industry, bringing the United States one step closer to achieving net-zero emissions by 2050.  Fusion, the process that powers ...

Rubber that doesn’t grow cracks when stretched many times

Rubber that doesn’t grow cracks when stretched many times
2023-12-14
Researchers from the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have increased the fatigue threshold of particle-reinforced rubber, developing a new, multiscale approach that allows the material to bear high loads and resist crack growth over repeated use. This approach could not only increase the longevity of rubber products such as tires but also reduce the amount of pollution from rubber particles shed during use.  The research is published in Nature. Naturally occurring rubber latex is soft and stretchy. For a range of applications, including tires, hoses, and dampeners, rubbers are reinforced by ...

Social distancing was more effective at preventing local COVID-19 transmission than international border closures

Social distancing was more effective at preventing local COVID-19 transmission than international border closures
2023-12-14
LA JOLLA, CA—Elucidating human contact networks could help predict and prevent the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 and future pandemic threats. A new study from Scripps Research scientists and collaborators points to which public health protocols worked to mitigate the spread of COVID-19—and which ones didn’t. In the study, published online in Cell on December 14, 2023, the Scripps Research-led team of scientists investigated the efficacy of different mandates—including stay-at-home measures, social distancing and travel restrictions—at preventing local and regional transmission during different phases of the COVID-19 pandemic. They found ...

Custom software speeds up, stabilizes high-profile ocean model

Custom software speeds up, stabilizes high-profile ocean model
2023-12-14
On the beach, ocean waves provide soothing white noise. But in scientific laboratories, they play a key role in weather forecasting and climate research. Along with the atmosphere, the ocean is typically one of the largest and most computationally demanding components of Earth system models like the Department of Energy’s Energy Exascale Earth System Model, or E3SM. Most modern ocean models focus on two categories of waves: a barotropic system, which has a fast wave propagation speed, and a baroclinic system, which ...

Can you change a chicken into a frog, a fish or a chameleon?

2023-12-14
Gastrulation is one of the most important phases in early embryonic development. Before gastrulation, vertebrate embryos are simple two-dimensional sheets of cells. By the end of gastrulation, an embryo will have begun to differentiate distinct cell types, set up the basic axes of the body and internalize some of the precursors for organs in a three-dimensional structure. Amniotes, like chickens and humans, will have developed a primitive streak, the precursor to the brain and skin, while fish and amphibians will have developed a spherical-shaped ...

How the immune system fights to keep herpes at bay

2023-12-14
Herpes simplex virus (HSV) is extremely common, affecting nearly two-thirds of the world’s population, according to the World Health Organization.   Once inside the body, HSV establishes a latent infection that periodically awakens, causing painful blisters on the skin, typically around the nose and mouth. While a mere  nuisance for most people, HSV can also lead to dangerous eye infections and brain inflammation in some people and cause life-threatening infections in newborns. Researchers have long known ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Breakdancers may risk ‘headspin hole’ caused by repetitive headspins, doctors warn

Don’t rely on AI chatbots for accurate, safe drug information, patients warned

Nearly $10M investment will expand and enhance stroke care in Minnesota, South Dakota

Former Georgia, Miami coach Mark Richt named 2025 Paul “Bear” Bryant Heart of a Champion

$8.1M grant will allow researchers to study the role of skeletal stem cells in craniofacial bone diseases and deformities

Northwestern to promote toddler mental health with $11.7 million NIMH grant

A new study finds that even positive third-party ratings can have negative effects

Optimizing inhibitors that fight antibiotic resistance

New Lancet Commission calls for urgent action on self-harm across the world

American Meteorological Society launches free content for weather enthusiasts with “Weather Band”

Disrupting Asxl1 gene prevents T-cell exhaustion, improving immunotherapy

How your skin tone could affect your meds

NEC Society, Cincinnati Children's, and UNC Children’s announce NEC Symposium in Chicago

Extreme heat may substantially raise mortality risk for people experiencing homelessness

UTA professor earns NSF grants to study human-computer interaction

How playing songs to Darwin’s finches helped UMass Amherst biologists confirm link between environment and the emergence of new species

A holy grail found for catalytic alkane activation

Galápagos finches could be singing a different song after repeated drought—one that leads to speciation

Hidden “tails” slow marine snow, impacting deep sea carbon transfer and storage

Seed dispersal “crisis” may impact plant species’ future in Europe

Nitrogen deposition has shifted European forest plant ranges westward over decades

Loss of lake ice has wide-ranging environmental and societal consequences

From chaos to structure

Variability in when and how cells divide promotes healthy development in embryos

Hidden biological processes can affect how the ocean stores carbon

European forest plants are migrating westwards, nitrogen main cause

Macronutrient and micronutrient intake among US women ages 20 to 44

Payments by drug and medical device manufacturers to us peer reviewers of major medical journals

One-third of cancer-related crowdfunding campaigns share medical financial hardship and health-related social needs, new research shows

Faulty 'fight or flight' response drives deadly C. difficile infections, research reveals

[Press-News.org] Transportation planning goes virtual