sally fenton, department for business, energy & industrial...

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1 Wednesday 30 th November Opening Plenary Talks Start Conference opening (Chair: Prof. Nigel Brandon) 13:00 10" Welcome and Introduction. Prof. Nigel Brandon (Chair), Imperial College London 13:10 40" Plenary: Sally Fenton, Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy. Energy Storage – Innovation & Opportunities. 13:50 40" Plenary: Ian Goodman, Goodman Wolfe Consulting. The business of batteries. ELGAR CONCERT HALL 14:30 30" Tea/coffee in the Aston Webb Great Hall. 11:30 Registration in the Aston Webb Reception. Lunch in the Aston Webb Great Hall. day one schedule Sally is currently working as an Innovation Programme Manager in the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy, leading national and international programmes which promote innovation in smart energy systems and offshore wind. Before joining the Department of Energy & Climate Change to work on innovation in January 2012, Sally held a number of technical and policy posts in central government, working on policy areas including: science in government; nuclear decommissioning; telecommunications policy and standards. Sally has an engineering degree from the University of Cambridge, a Cranfield MBA and her professional background is in radiocommunications engineering. Sally Fenton, Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy (BEIS) Ian has been involved with electric vehicles for the past 30 years and was the CEO of Goodwolfe Energy until 2014 when he Co- Founded the Vayon Group and took up the role of VP of Research & Innovation. Ian is an intuitive engineer, with a broad knowledge of electric vehicles but specialising in the lithium ion battery system design and manufacture for the last 10 years. To date, Ian has developed over 30 battery systems to meet customer requirements, using LiFePO4, LTO, NMC and NCA chemistries, in automotive, marine, robotics, military and grid ESS applications. Ian Goodman, Goodman Wolfe Consulting

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1

Wednesday 30th November Opening Plenary Talks

Start Conference opening (Chair: Prof. Nigel Brandon)

13:00 10" Welcome and Introduction.Prof. Nigel Brandon (Chair), Imperial College London

13:10 40" Plenary: Sally Fenton, Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy.Energy Storage – Innovation & Opportunities.

13:50 40" Plenary: Ian Goodman, Goodman Wolfe Consulting.The business of batteries.

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14:30 30" Tea/coffee in the Aston Webb Great Hall.

11:30 Registration in the Aston Webb Reception.Lunch in the Aston Webb Great Hall.

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Sally is currently working as an Innovation Programme Manager in the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy, leading national and international programmes which promote innovation in smart energy systems and offshore wind. Before joining the Department of Energy & Climate Change to work on innovation in January 2012, Sally held a number of technical and policy posts in central government, working on policy areas including: science in government; nuclear decommissioning; telecommunications policy and standards. Sally has an engineering degree from the University of Cambridge, a Cranfield MBA and her professional background is in radiocommunications engineering.

Sally Fenton, Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy (BEIS)

Ian has been involved with electric vehicles for the past 30 years and was the CEO of Goodwolfe Energy until 2014 when he Co-Founded the Vayon Group and took up the role of VP of Research & Innovation. Ian is an intuitive engineer, with a broad knowledge of electric vehicles but specialising in the lithium ion battery system design and manufacture for the last 10 years. To date, Ian has developed over 30 battery systems to meet customer requirements, using LiFePO4, LTO, NMC and NCA chemistries, in automotive, marine, robotics, military and grid ESS applications.

Ian Goodman, Goodman Wolfe Consulting

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Start Demonstration Projects (Chair: Dr. Rohit Bhagat)

15:00 30" Prof. Bala Venkatesh, NSERC Energy Storage Technology Network (NEST), Canada. Energy Storage in Canadian Universities.

15:30 15" Colin Arnold, AGM Batteries Ltd. UK Automotive Battery Supply Chain and Sodium-Ion Batteries for Electric Vehicles - Two Automotive Projects but Potential for Energy Storage.

15:45 15" Prof. Rob Thring, Loughborough University. The Elevate Project.

16:00 15" Gerard Finneran, Glen Dimplex. Horizon 2020 RealValue Project - Smart Electric Thermal Storage.

16:15 15" Prof David Greenwood, Warwick Manufacturing Group. Automated Module-to-pack Pilot Line for Industrial Innovation (Amplifii).

16:30 15" Tim Gardhouse, Highview Power Storage. On the Process to Commercialisation of Liquid Air Energy Storage.

16:45 15" Richard Flynn, redT. Cost Reduction through Co-location.

Start 1' Translating Science into Impact: Advanced Propulsion Centre (Chair: Prof. David Greenwood)

17:15 15" Chris May, APC. Overview of the Advanced Propulsion Centre.

17:30 15" Mike Woodcock, APC. Overview of the APC Spoke Network.

17:45 15" Prof. David Greenwood, WMG. Overview of the APC Electrical Energy Storage Spoke.

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18:30 Poster session and networking drinks in the Aston Webb Great Hall.

Wednesday 30th November Schedule

Dr. Rohit BhagatWMG

Prof. David GreenwoodWMG

Colin ArnoldAGM Batteries Ltd

Mike WoodcockAPC

Gerard FinneranGlen Dimplex

Prof. Bala VenkateshCanada NEST

Richard FlynnredT

Chris MayAPC

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Start Policy and Economics of Storage in Energy Systems(Chairs: Prof. Peter Taylor and Dr. Jonathan Radcliffe)

15:00 30" Keynote: Prof. Goran Strbac, Imperial College London.Energy storage: a game changer for the energy market.

15:30 20" Dr. Giorgio Castagneto Gissey, UCL. Regulatory Barriers to Energy Storage Deployment: the UK Perspective.

15:50 20" Subhash Kumar, Institute for Future Energy Consumer Needs and Behaviour. Grid-Connected Renewables and Energy Storage Systems and Their CO

2 Emission Mitigation Potential in Germany:

a Least Cost Analysis.

16:10 20" Olayinka Williams, Imperial College Business School. The Welfare Effects of Market Power in Energy Storage.

16:30 20" Intermission

16:50 30" Keynote: Dr. Matteo Di Castelnuovo, Bocconi University, Milan.Tesla vs BMW? Not quite! Energy Storage in the US vs Germany: a Comparative Analysis of Market Design and Regulatory Frameworks.

17:20 20" Dr. Nicholas Good, University of Manchester. A Framework for Modelling and Assessment of Smart, Multi-Energy Districts.

17:40 20" Rosemary Whitbread, Centre for Energy Innovation, HSL. Safe Innovation in Energy Storage Systems - Underpinning Risk Management, Governance, Policy and Standards.

18:00 20" Dr. Catherine Bale, University of Leeds. Consortium for Modelling and Analysis of Decentralised Energy Storage: Integrating distributed storage in cities.

Wednesday 30th November Schedule

Prof. Peter TaylorUniversity of Leeds

Prof. Goran StrbacImperial College London

Dr. Matteo Di CastelnuovoBocconi University, Milan

Dr. Jonathan RadcliffeUniversity of Birmingham

18:30 Poster session and networking drinks in the Aston Webb Great Hall.

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08:30 30" Tea/coffee in the Aston Webb Great Hall.

Dr. Dan RogersUniversity of Oxford

Prof. Clare GreyUniversity of Cambridge

Thursday 1st December Plenary Talks

Start Opening Plenaries (Chair: Prof. Nigel Brandon)

09:00 40" Plenary: Dr. Dan Rogers, University of Oxford.Power Electronics for Grid-scale Energy Storage.

09:40 40" Plenary: Prof. Clare Grey, University of Cambridge.Developing and Applying New Tools to Understand how Materials for Li and “beyond-Li” Battery Technologies Function.

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10:20 30" Tea/coffee in the Aston Webb Great Hall.

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Clare P. Grey is the Geoffrey Moorhouse-Gibson Professor of Chemistry at Cambridge University. She received a BA and D. Phil. (1991) in Chemistry from the University of Oxford. After spending a year as a Royal Society post-doctoral Fellow at Nijmegen University and two years as a visiting scientist at DuPont CR&D in Wilmington, DE (1992-1993) she joined the faculty at Stony Brook University (SBU) as an Assistant (1994), Associate (1997) and then Full Professor (2001). She moved to Cambridge in 2009, maintaining a part-time position at SBU. She was the director of the Northeastern Chemical Energy Storage Center, a Department of Energy, Energy Frontier Research Center (2009-2010) and Associate director (2011-2014). Her recent honors and awards include the 2007 Research Award of the Battery Division of the Electrochemical Chemical Society, the 2010 Ampere and RSC John Jeyes Awards, the 2011 Royal Society Kavli Lecture and Medal for work relating to the Environment/Energy, Honorary PhD Degrees from the Universities of Orleans (2012) and Lancaster (2013), the Gunther Laukien Award from the Experimental NMR Conference (2013), the Research Award from the International Battery Association (2013) and the Royal Society Davy Award (2014). She is a Fellow of the Royal Society. Her current research interests include the use of solid state NMR and diffraction-based methods to investigate structure and dynamics in materials for energy storage and conversion and in environmental chemistry.

Dan received his Ph.D. degree in electrical and electronic engineering from Imperial College London in 2011. He is currently a Lecturer in the Energy and Power Group at the University of Oxford. Until early 2016, he was a Senior Lecturer in the Institute of Energy at Cardiff University. He is an investigator on several EPSRC, EU and industry funded research projects in the areas of power electronics, HVDC and grid-scale energy storage. His research interests include the use of medium- and large-scale power-electronic systems to create flexible electrical networks capable of taking advantage of a diverse range of generation technologies.

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Start Storage for Transport(Chairs: Prof. Paul Jennings and Dr. Greg Offer)

10:50 30" Keynote: Dr. Valentina Gentili, Johnson Matthey Battery Systems (JMBS). Implications and Challenges for Future Automotive Batteries.

11:20 20" Yan Zhao, Imperial College London. Improve Li-ion battery Performance by Externally Applied Compression - a Study on Post High-Temperature Excursion Performance.

11:40 20" Thomas Bruen, Warwick Manufacturing Group (WMG). Model Based Design of Active Balancing Control Systems.

12:00 20" Dr. Monica Marinescu, Imperial College London. Improving Performance of Li-S Cells Under Cycling: a Model-Informed approach.

12:20 20" Christos Kalyvas, University of Hertfordshire. 3-D Thermal Transient Modelling of Li-ion Battery Packs for Use in Battery-Powered Personal Rapid Transit Vehicles.

Prof. Paul JenningsWMG

Dr. Greg OfferImperial College London

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Dr. Valentina GentiliJohnson Matthey Battery Systems

12:40 Lunch in the Aston Webb Great Hall.

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Dr. Haris PatsiosNewcastle University

Dr. Rebecca ToddThe University of Manchester

Thursday 1st December Morning Schedule

Start Integration of Storage into Energy Networks(Chairs: Dr. Rebecca Todd and Dr. Haris Patsios)

10:50 30" Keynote: Dr. Graham Oakes, Upside Energy.Stimulating Storage Research through Open Innovation.

11:20 20" Stalin Munoz Vaca, Newcastle University. Hybrid Energy Storage System for Improving Frequency Response of Wind Farms.

11:40 20" Jaehwa Lee, University of Oxford. Optimal Operation of a Microgrid using Gaussian Processes and Model Predictive Control.

12:00 20" Dr. Gillian Williamson, Parsons Brinckerhoff. Network Integration Challenges & Benefits from Energy Storage - Findings from DS2030.

12:20 20" Dr. Timur Yunusov, University of Reading. Deployment of Half-hourly Schedules on a DNO-owned Energy Storage System to Support Suburban LV network: field trials.

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12:40 Lunch in the Aston Webb Great Hall.

Dr. Graham OakesUpside Energy

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Prof. Nigel BrandonImperial College London

Prof. Harry HosterLancaster University

Start Hydrogen for Energy Storage(Chairs: Prof. Nigel Brandon and Prof. Harry Hoster)

13:40 30" Keynote: Prof. Thomas Schmidt, Paul Scherrer Institute. Hydrogen Production by Electrolysis: Recent Progress on Closing Gaps.

14:10 30" Keynote: Prof. Bent Sørensen, Roskilde University. The Role of Underground Hydrogen Stores in Sustainable Energy Futures.

14:40 20" Pengcheng Zhao, Global Energy Interconnection Research Institute of State Grid Corporation of China. A Hydrogen Energy Storage Demonstration Platform in Chinese Power Transmission Industry.

15:00 20" Mario Ludwig, Global Energy Interconnection Research Institute Europe. Safety Analysis of a Hydrogen Energy Storage System.

15:20 20" Dr. Martin Khzouz, Coventry University. Solid State hydrogen storage and production for mobility applications.

15:40 Tea/coffee in the Aston Webb Great Hall.

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Prof. Thomas SchmidtPaul Scherrer Institute

Prof. Bent SørensenRoskilde University

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Prof. Fikile BrushettMIT

Thursday 1st December Afternoon Schedule

Start Flow Batteries(Chairs: Dr. Vladimir Yufit and Dr. Léonard Berlouis)

13:40 30" Keynote: Prof. Fikile Brushett, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.Redox Flow Batteries: Exploring an Emerging Design Space.

14:10 30" Keynote: Dr. Xiaohong Li, University of Exeter.Membrane-free Redox Flow Battery System.

14:40 20" Declan Bryans, University of Strathclyde. Synthesis and Characterisation of Novel Complex Additives for Use in the Hybrid ZnBr2 Flow Battery.

15:00 20" Dr. Barun Chakrabarti, Imperial College London. Advanced Characterisation of Graphene Deposited Carbon Paper Electrodes for the All-Vanadium Redox Flow Battery.

15:20 20" Dr. Kathryn Toghill, Lancaster University. New Chemistries for Non-Aqueous Redox-Flow Batteries: Cobalt (II) Complexes with Azole-Pyridine Ligands.

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Dr. Xiaohong LiUniversity of Exeter

Dr. Léonard BerlouisUniversity of Strathclyde

15:40 Tea/coffee in the Aston Webb Great Hall.

Dr. Vladimir YufitImperial College London

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Start Thermal, Mechanical and Thermochemical Storage(Chairs: Prof. Jihong Wang and Prof. Yulong Ding)

16:10 30" Keynote: Dr. Alex White, University of CambridgePumped Thermal Exergy Storage: Past, Present and Future.

16:40 20" Pau Farres-Antunez, University of Cambridge. Thermodynamic Strategies for Pumped Thermal Exergy Storage with Liquid Reservoirs.

17:00 20" Dr. David Evans, British Geological Survey. Initial Studies to Derive Estimates of Potential UK Salt Cavern Volumes and Exergy Storage.

17:20 20" Afrah Awad, University of Leeds. Thermal Energy Storage Enhancement of Dispersing Nanoparticles in a New PCM (NaNO3).

17:40 10" Intermission

17:50 30" Keynote: Prof. Seamus Garvey, The University of Nottingham.The Case for CAES - New Perspectives on Exergy Storage, Involving Compressed Air.

18:20 20" Adriano Sciacovelli, University of Birmingham. Liquid Air Energy Storage with Packed Bed Cold Thermal Storage - Next Generation of Grid Storage Plants.

18:40 20" Bruno Cardenas, University of Nottingham. Reduction of Exergy Losses in a CAES System Through the Utilisation of Multiple Thermal Stores.

19:00 20" Niccolo Le Brun, Imperial College London. Thermohydraulic Characterisation of Molten Salts as PCMs for Thermal Energy Storage.

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Prof. Jihong WangThe University of Warwick

Prof. Yulong DingUniversity of Birmingham

Dr. Alex WhiteUniversity of Cambridge

Prof. Seamus GarveyThe University of Nottingham

19:30 Poster Awards and Conference Dinner in the Noble Room.

Thursday 1st December Afternoon Schedule

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Thursday 1st December Afternoon Schedule

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Dr. Natasha ShirshovaDurham University

19:30 Poster Awards and Conference Dinner in the Noble Room.

Start Electrochemical Energy Storage(Chairs: Dr. Natasha Shirshova, Dr. Laurence Hardwick, Dr.

Nuria Garcia-Araez and Prof. Patrick Grant)

16:10 30" Keynote: Prof. Mauro Pasta, University of Oxford.A New Approach to Solid State Batteries using Prussian Blue Analogue Materials.

16:40 20" Dr. Emma Kendrick, Sharp Laboratories of Europe. Energy Optimisation of a Sodium Ion Battery Chemistry.

17:00 20" Dr. Chun Huang, University of Oxford. Improving Energy Storage Performance of Li-ion Batteries through Electrode Structure Design and Advanced Manufacturing.

17:20 20" Prof. Harry Hoster, Lancaster University. Lithium Oxygen Cells: the Key Role of Inhomogeneous Cathode Passivation.

17:40 10" Intermission

17:50 30" Keynote: Dr. Edmund Cussen, University of Strathclyde.Solid State Electrolytes for Lithium Batteries: Ions that can Hop, Skip and Jump.

18:20 20" Prof. Maria-Magdalena Titirici, Queen Mary University London. Designing Low Cost Carbon Anodes for Na-ion Batteries.

18:40 20" Prof. Robert Dryfe, Univ. Manchester. MoS2 as a Na-ion Battery

Anode Material: in situ EPR study of Electrochemical Sodiation.

19:00 20" Brett Helms, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Rational Design of Microporous Polymeric Materials for Selective Ion Transport in Electrochemical Devices.

Dr. Laurence HardwickUniversity of Liverpool

Dr. Nuria Garcia AraezUniversity of Southampton

Prof, Mauro PastaUniversity of Oxford

Dr. Edmund CussenUniversity of Strathclyde

Prof, Patrick GrantUniversity of Oxford

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Friday 2nd December Schedule

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Start Advanced Tools and Diagnostics(Chairs: Dr. Paul Shearing and Dr. Edmund Cussen)

09:00 30" Keynote: Dr. Pooja Panchmatia, Loughborough UniversitySolid State Modelling of Energy Storage Materials.

09:30 30" Keynote: Dr. Laurence Hardwick, University of LiverpoolIn situ Surface Enhanced Infrared Spectroscopy to track Oxygen Reduction Reaction in Presence of Lithium ions.

10:00 20" Ian Hayward, Renishaw plc. Focusing on the Raman Spectroscopy of Lithium-ion Batteries.

10:20 20" Michael Mercer, Lancaster University. Monte Carlo Simulations of Entropy Profiles in Li-ion Batteries: Gaining Understanding of the Influence of Crystalline Defects.

10:40 20" Kent Griffith, University of Cambridge. Atomic and Electronic Structure of High-rate Battery Materials via X-ray Diffraction, X-ray Absorption, Multinuclear NMR and DFT.

11:00 20" Romeo Malik, WMG. Silicon Electrode Degradation Analysis using Laboratory Based X-ray Tomography.

11:20 20" Matyáš Zetek, Imperial College London. Kinetics of Ionic and Electronic Transport in Polymers Investigated via Optical Spectroscopy.

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11:40 30" Tea/coffee in the Aston Webb Great Hall

Dr. Pooja PanchmatiaLoughborough University

Dr. Laurence HardwickUniversity of Liverpool

Dr. Paul ShearingUCL

Dr. Edmund CussenUniversity of Strathclyde

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Start Power Management and Control(Chair: Prof. David Howey)

09:00 30" Keynote: Joel Sylvester, Dukosi.Developments in Battery Management Technology for Energy Storage.

09:30 30" Keynote: Prof. David Stone, The University of Sheffield.Electrical Energy Storage - An Academic Approach to a Practical Problem.

10:00 20" Damien Frost, University of Oxford. Wifi Enabled Battery Management Systems: Using the Internet of Things to Enhance Battery Technology.

10:20 20" Maximilian Zangs, University of Reading. On-Line Adjustment of Battery Schedules for Supporting LV Distribution Network Operation.

10:40 20" Dr. Panayiotis Romanos, CREST, Loughborough University. Frequency Control by Thermal Energy Storage Systems in Smart Grids.

11:00 20" Damian Giaouris, Newcastle University. Generic Modelling of Energy Management Methods in Hybrid Energy Systems Including Energy Storage.

11:20 20" Amir Eleffendi, University of Oxford. Battery Management System for Very-Large Scale Grid Connected Energy Storage Systems.

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Prof. David HoweyUniversity of Oxford

11:40 30" Tea/coffee in the Aston Webb Great Hall

08:30 30" Tea/coffee in the Aston Webb Great Hall.

Friday 2nd December Schedule

Prof. David StoneThe University of Sheffield

Joel SylvesterDukosi

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Four research areas:• Novel materials for increased energy and power density, as well as improved

operational stability during the discharge process.• Thermodynamics and generation processes, focusing on a reduced footprint,

increased discharge stability and reduced energy losses of the heat exchange processes.

• Systems integration, control and optimisation focuses on optimising the performance of CES and TES systems on the grid and in the energy market.

• Pilot-scale test bed facility to demonstrate CES and TES applications.

Friday 2nd December Closing Plenary Talk

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Start Conference close (Chair: Prof. Nigel Brandon)

12:10 40" Plenary: Prof. Phil Taylor, Newcastle UniversityEnergy Storage as an Integral Part of Whole Energy Systems.

12:50 10" Prof. Nigel Brandon: Closing Remarks and End.

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13:30 University of Birmingham Lab Tours.

Phil Taylor’s research at Newcastle University focuses on the challenges associated with the widespread integration and control of distributed/renewable generation in electrical distribution networks. He received an Engineering Doctorate in the field of intelligent demand side management techniques from the University of Manchester in 2001. Significant industrial experience as an electrical engineer including a period working in the transmission and distribution projects team at GEC Alsthom. Most recent position was Research and Development Director at Econnect (now Senergy Econnect), a consultancy firm specialising in the grid integration of renewable energy. Previously held the DONG Energy Chair in Renewable Energy and was Deputy Director of the Durham Energy Institute and Director of the Multi-disciplinary Centre for Doctoral Training in Energy.

LAB TOURS, 13:30, Friday 2nd December

A member of the Birmingham team will accompany each group on the tour, which takes approximately 2 hours. The tours will start with an introductory presentation and visits to Chemical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, and Metallurgy and Materials.

Prof. Phil TaylorNewcastle University