Has observing a statistically improbable event while evaluating your processes made you wonder about playing the lottery?

Log in
Follow us

Dr. Sunita Satyapal is director of the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Fuel Cell Technologies Program within the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy. She is responsible for the program’s overall strategy and execution covering both hydrogen and fuel cell technologies, including oversight and coordination of approximately $100 million in research, development, demonstration and deployment activities.
CEP editor Emily Frangenberg had a chance to sit down with Dr. Satyapal at AIChE's 2013 Spring Meeting to discuss her work at the US Department of Energy. You can watch the interview in the video panel at right.
Dr. Sunita Satyapal's talk was titled "Progress and Challenges in Emerging Clean Energy Technology: A Case Study in Hydrogen and Fuel Cells from the U.S. Department of Energy." See Abstract.
Fancy Yourself a Writer? We're looking for authors for The Reactor and contributors of video, humor, book reviews, challenges/brain teasers, and polls for ChEnected pages. You'll be credited in the post. Find out more at Chenected.aiche.org/contribute
Thanks for the humor, I always find such comedy clips useful as team icebreakers in meetings, use in tollgate reviews to add in some healthy humor, or even in training materials to keep things interesting.
Steven,
Thanks for your feedback. There would be nothing more pleasing to me than having Boil's Laws help raise the effectiveness of meetings, reviews or training. This is exactly the type of impact I was hoping the comic strip could bring to our very challenging work as engineers and scientist.
Rich
we need to see more of you.
Kent; I would love nothing more than producing more work, however the "Rich Byrnes Boil's Laws Production Studios" are currently working on a limited budget and limited number of available hours. "Life" getting in the way of "living" once again. Who invented the 24 hour day in the first place, obviously someone that didn't have enough to do with their time……….