Klaus Lackner
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Klaus_Lackner an entity of type: Thing
Klaus Stephan Lackner ist ein deutscher Physiker und seit 2006 Leiter des Lenfest Center for Sustainable Energy am der Columbia University. Er nutzte 1999 die Aminwäsche um Kohlendioxid aus der Umgebungsluft zu extrahieren. Daraus wurde das Direct air capture Verfahren.
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Klaus S. Lackner is the Founding Director of the Center for Negative Carbon Emissions (CNCE) and a professor in School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment at Arizona State University. He is scientific advisor to Carbon Collect Limited (name changed from Silicon Kingdom Holdings Limited in April 2021), and senior science advisor to Aircela Inc. He is a pioneer in carbon management and is the first to suggest capturing carbon dioxide from air in the context of addressing climate change.
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Klaus Lackner New Yorken dagoen Columbiako Unibertsitatean lurra eta ingurumen-ingeniaritza departamentuko irakaslea da eta Tucson-eko ikerketa globaletarako teknologien fundatzailea ere. Lackner doktoreak karbono dioxidoa harrapatzearen kontzeptua sustatu zuen, berotegi efektua gutxitzeko asmoz. Fisikari tekniko bezala entrenatua, 1995. urtetik daramatza bestelako proiektuak diseinatzen (zuhaitz sintetikoak, Kare biziaren prozesua,...), karbono dioxidoaren bahiketa silikato mineralen bidez eta zero emisioa duten zentral elektrikoen diseinua. Bere lana ere gehitzen da, ikatzaren biltegiratze geologikoa, zentral elektrikoen modelakuntza, tenperatura altuetan karbonoa xurgatzen duten mintzak, erregai fosilen teknologia aurreratuak, automatizazioa, besteen artean. Gaur egun energia sostengaga
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Klaus Lackner
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Klaus Lackner
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Klaus Lackner
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Klaus S. Lackner
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Klaus S. Lackner
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Carbon Dioxide Capture and Sequestration
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Klaus Stephan Lackner ist ein deutscher Physiker und seit 2006 Leiter des Lenfest Center for Sustainable Energy am der Columbia University. Er nutzte 1999 die Aminwäsche um Kohlendioxid aus der Umgebungsluft zu extrahieren. Daraus wurde das Direct air capture Verfahren.
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Klaus Lackner New Yorken dagoen Columbiako Unibertsitatean lurra eta ingurumen-ingeniaritza departamentuko irakaslea da eta Tucson-eko ikerketa globaletarako teknologien fundatzailea ere. Lackner doktoreak karbono dioxidoa harrapatzearen kontzeptua sustatu zuen, berotegi efektua gutxitzeko asmoz. Fisikari tekniko bezala entrenatua, 1995. urtetik daramatza bestelako proiektuak diseinatzen (zuhaitz sintetikoak, Kare biziaren prozesua,...), karbono dioxidoaren bahiketa silikato mineralen bidez eta zero emisioa duten zentral elektrikoen diseinua. Bere lana ere gehitzen da, ikatzaren biltegiratze geologikoa, zentral elektrikoen modelakuntza, tenperatura altuetan karbonoa xurgatzen duten mintzak, erregai fosilen teknologia aurreratuak, automatizazioa, besteen artean. Gaur egun energia sostengagarriaren zuzendaria da, Columbia unibertsitateko Lenfest zentroan.
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Klaus S. Lackner is the Founding Director of the Center for Negative Carbon Emissions (CNCE) and a professor in School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment at Arizona State University. He is scientific advisor to Carbon Collect Limited (name changed from Silicon Kingdom Holdings Limited in April 2021), and senior science advisor to Aircela Inc. He is a pioneer in carbon management and is the first to suggest capturing carbon dioxide from air in the context of addressing climate change. His works include demonstrating and improving passive methods to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, integrating air capture technology with applications for using carbon dioxide, exploring safe and permanent disposal options for carbon dioxide, and identifying opportunities for automation and scaling.As of 28 December 2019 his publications have been cited 12771 times and his h-index is 53. Previously, he was the director of the Lenfest Center for Sustainable Energy at the Earth Institute. and Faculty in the Earth and Environmental Engineering department at Columbia University from 2001-2014. Along with CNCE executive director Allen Wright, he co-founded one of the first privately held air capture companies—Global Research Technologies (GRT)—in Tucson, Arizona where they demonstrated the moisture swing. Prior to his academic work he held appointments at the theoretical division of Los Alamos National Laboratory for nearly 17 years. His idea of the self-replicating machines along with his colleague, Christopher Wendt, was featured in 1995 by Discover Magazine as "One of the 7 Ideas that can Change the World." He has also invented the Mechanical Tree which is designed to soak up passively the carbon dioxide from the air.
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