U-M startup wins Clean Energy Prize

Graduate student Nick Moroz, pictured here with the Clean Energy Prize trophy, led the team of graduate students who invented the new technology. (Photo: U-M Photo Services.)

Graduate student Nick Moroz, pictured here with the Clean Energy Prize trophy, led the team of graduate students who invented the new technology. (Photo: U-M Photo Services.)

A University of Michigan start-up whose technology could lead to cheaper lithium-ion batteries won the top prize of $50,000 in the 2011 Clean Energy Prize business plan competition. Speaking at the awards ceremony at Rackham Auditorium, Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder hailed the Clean Energy Prize and its winners, saying “It’s great to see the intersection of three things that I love. We’re talking about innovation and entrepreneurship, we’re talking about clean energy, something that is vitally important for our future. It’s about economic growth, and doing it in the most responsible way possible in terms of the legacy we leave and the opportunity it provides us and the third thing is it involves students.”To have those three things come together is really special.”The Clean Energy Prize, established by DTE Energy and U-M in 2008, is designed to encourage entrepreneurship in Michigan and the development of clean-energy technologies. This year’s contest was organized by the U-M College of Engineering’s Center for Entrepreneurship and DTE.The winning company, CSquared Innovations, is a U-M start-up project that has developed a faster, cheaper, laser-based method of making nano-structured materials and coatings for lithium-ion battery electrodes, solar cells, and industrial coatings. The company, which should launch shortly from U-M Tech Transfer’s Venture Center, is based on technology developed in the lab of Pravansu Mohanty, a professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at U-M Dearborn.”I’m very excited to take the next step and to establish our firm as a strong cleantech presence in the Li-ion battery market and to begin creating jobs in Michigan,” said team leader Nick Moroz, a doctoral student in the U-M Ann Arbor Department of Materials Science and Engineering. In addition to Mohanty and Moroz, other team members are Ramesh Guduru, chief scientist and Harishankar Umapathy, operations manager.Gerard Anderson, DTE Energy president and CEO, said this year’s competition exceeded expectations. “The quality of the proposals and the talent of the students continue to surprise and impress us,” Anderson said.Meanwhile, previous Clean Energy Prize winners continue to build their businesses.Algal Scientific, the 2008 winner, has raised more than $300,000 in cash and in-kind services to support its technology that uses algae to simultaneously treat wastewater and produce the raw materials for biofuels. The company employs nearly a dozen staff and technical advisers and is deploying a demonstration-scale wastewater treatment plant at an industrial facility in Ohio.Enertia, the 2009-2010, winner, is continuing to develop and refine their tiny generators that produce electricity from random ambient vibrations. The company has demonstrated a second-generation prototype that can turn vibrations from traffic on a suspension bridge into useable electricity.Three other teams were honored in the 2011 contest. Team Smart Energy, out of U-M, won second prize and $25,000 for its innovative financing model to retrofit municipal buildings for energy efficiency savings. Team Impact Card, also out of U-M, won third and $10,000 for its first-of-its-kind funding mechanism that aggregates consumer credit card reward points as project financing for renewable energy development. Team Perennial BioEnergy, out of Western Michigan University, finished fourth and received $7,000 for its plan to develop a pennycress-based biodiesel industry.

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  1. Roger Olivier - 3

    Nice article!

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