Renewable Energy Expert to Lead New Federally Funded Satellite Industrial Assessment Center at the University
Ravi Gorthala, Ph.D., will serve as director of the center, which is supported by a $1.3 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy and is part of a collaboration with the University of Connecticut. The center will help small and medium-sized regional manufacturers reduce their carbon footprint and improve their productivity, and it will provide students with hands-on learning opportunities.
October 22, 2021
By Renee Chmiel, Office of Marketing and Communications
A student oversees a pre-pandemic outreach event that included energy consultants and engineers from United Illuminating and Eversource.
Ravi Gorthala, Ph.D., is passionate about inspiring the next generation of engineers and helping local businesses. A $1.3 million grant from the will enable him and fellow faculty members to create new learning opportunities for students at the University of New Haven while helping reduce the region鈥檚 carbon footprint.
The grant, which is part of an award to the University of Connecticut from the DOE, will enable Dr. Gorthala, who has previously received funding from agencies such as , the , and the DOE, to collaborate with to start a satellite Industrial Assessment Center (IAC) at the University of New Haven. IACs provide site-specific recommendations to small and medium-sized manufacturers to help them improve productivity, reduce waste, conserve energy, train the workforce of tomorrow, and increase information security.
鈥淲e will be working closely with students,鈥 said Dr. Gorthala, chair of the University鈥檚 Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering. 鈥淚t will be a great experience, and it鈥檚 an exciting opportunity. The energy audits we conduct will be performed with students on-site, and we鈥檒l be doing field visits with students. They鈥檒l be industry ready and work ready.鈥
鈥淭his is a terrific opportunity for our students to engage in important, forward-thinking work, providing significant benefits for small and medium-sized manufacturers that play a critical role in driving innovation,鈥 added Steven H. Kaplan, Ph.D., president of the University of New Haven. 鈥淚 am grateful for Dr. Gorthala鈥檚 visionary leadership on this project and for the support of the Department of Energy and our colleagues at the University of Connecticut for creating an initiative that is sure to have a far-reaching and long-lasting impact.鈥
鈥淐onnecticut鈥檚 local manufacturers are a pillar of our economy. It is critical that the federal government make investments to assist local manufacturers in adopting new forms of energy, reducing their carbon footprint, and enhancing their operations,鈥 said , the House Appropriations Committee Chair. 鈥淎s chair of the committee that drives these federal investments, I am grateful for the leadership of the University of New Haven as well as the investment of the Department of Energy in making this important program a reality.鈥
鈥楾his is very strategic鈥
Dr. Gorthala said that without the support and backing from and , this grant would not have been feasible. He also noted is supporting this center.
鈥淎s one of the largest employers of energy engineers in New England, Eversource is delighted that the Department of Energy has awarded federal funding to UConn and the University of New Haven for their Industrial Assessment Center,鈥 said Eversource Director of Energy Efficiency Ron Araujo. 鈥淲e look forward to collaborating with the schools on training and engaging with the next generation of energy-efficiency graduates, who will help decarbonize the manufacturing sector and join us in continuing to lead the clean energy economy.鈥
A mechanical engineering student works on an energy-efficiency project.
The grant is part of a $60 million nationwide investment intended to increase energy efficiency in manufacturing. It will enable 32 universities in 28 states 鈥 the largest cohort yet of university-based IACs 鈥 to conduct industrial assessments to help local small and medium-sized manufacturers lower their costs and energy use and provide additional professional development. Each IAC covers a 150-mile area.
鈥淲e at United Illuminating, , and , subsidiaries of , are thrilled with the proposed Industrial Assessment Center at the University of Connecticut and the University of New Haven,鈥 said Hammad Chaudhry, senior manager, conservation and load management. 鈥淭he IAC will help our manufacturing customers identify energy-efficiency and energy-reduction opportunities. Additionally, the IAC will provide real-world experience to future engineers at the universities. We are excited about this partnership and are looking forward to working with the universities.鈥
Dr. Gorthala said the already covers some territory in Connecticut and Rhode Island and that the collaboration between the University of New Haven and UConn would enable both universities to expand their outreach to southern New England by adding southern Connecticut and parts of New York, including Long Island.
鈥淯Conn is the main center, and the University of New Haven is the satellite center,鈥 said Dr. Gorthala. 鈥淭his was very strategic. We are equal partners. We will be working together, and the activities of both centers are similar.鈥
鈥淒r. Ravi Gorthala is a leader in improving the energy efficiency of buildings and has assembled a strong team of faculty to contribute toward the IAC that the University of New Haven will operate,鈥 added Ronald Harichandran, Ph.D., PE, vice provost for research and dean of the Tagliatela College of Engineering. 鈥淲e are thrilled to secure this joint project with the University of Connecticut to advance the energy-efficiency needs of the region.鈥
鈥楽tudents will be trained on the equipment they will be using in the field鈥
Dr. Gorthala said he and his colleagues on the initiative will work together to host workshops and offer professional development. They also will collaborate to address industry challenges such as monitoring energy use, water use, and conservation; lowering energy costs; and mitigating cybersecurity risks.
鈥淚n Connecticut, we have not had a center like this,鈥 said Dr. Gorthala. 鈥淭his is going to make a big difference. Our center will clearly impact the carbon footprint through energy savings and water conservation 鈥 not only in Connecticut but also in southern New England and New York and, possibly, into New Jersey as well.鈥
The IAC will offer hands-on opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students each year. Their training will include safety procedures, energy audits, and report writing.
鈥淲e will be developing a new curriculum with courses focused on industrial energy audits,鈥 said Dr. Gorthala. 鈥淪tudents will be trained on the equipment they will be using in the field audits. They鈥檒l also be developing their communication skills, including verbal and written communication skills, with supervision from faculty members.鈥
Mechanical engineering students work on a DOE-funded project at Alinabal, a manufacturing company in Milford, Conn.
鈥楾his is very timely 鈥 It鈥檚 going to be a big deal鈥
An engineer, researcher, inventor, and educator, Dr. Gorthala has more than 25 years of industry experience. His passion for education was sparked by an after-school science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) program he started for middle-school girls called GRITS (Girls, Research, Invention, Technology, Science) back when he was living in North Carolina. He began teaching at the University of New Haven in 2012, making the switch from teaching middle school students to university students.
Committed to fostering opportunities for diversity and inclusion, Dr. Gorthala is dedicated to making these endeavors an integral part of the IAC as the work begins this semester. He will also take part in an orientation and training session for new IAC directors.
Dr. Gorthala is looking forward to his leadership role with the center and to the opportunities he will have to collaborate and share his knowledge. He is also excited about the possibilities his students will have 鈥 and the impact their work will have on the region, the manufacturing industry, and the environment. His students have already been receiving such hands-on experience through a current project that is being funded by the DOE.
鈥淚 think this is very timely,鈥 said Dr. Gorthala. 鈥淐limate change is real. Energy efficiency is number one in reducing the carbon footprint. Before we look into renewable energy resources, we need to reduce energy consumption.
鈥淭his is just the beginning,鈥 he continued. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be a big deal. I hope we鈥檒l have state and federal officials visiting the center.鈥