Stony Brook researchers, in collaboration with the University of Massachusetts Lowell,
will be investigating ways to make energy generation, storage and system operation
more efficient, reliable and resilient, particularly in microgrid settings such as
shore-based environments, under a new program funded by the United States Navy Office
of Naval Research. The Navy grant, totaling $7.36 million and shared equally between
the two institutions, will run through Fall 2022.

Energy storage is a key aspect of the project collaborative. Determining the most
effective, robust and resilient linkages for multiple battery stacks, shown in this
rendering, is one project goal related to energy storage.
Each institution will conduct nine multidisciplinary projects to achieve the research
goals, complementing each other’s efforts in areas including grid control, security
and infrastructure monitoring; energy storage, materials and grid management; and
zero-carbon fuels. Both will collaborate to develop new training approaches, an area
in which the domain knowledge and experience of National Grid and the Long Island
Power Authority will be valuable assets.
“Efficient energy is vital to the security and economic stability of our region and
nation. Stony Brook University will continue to play an important role in advancing
energy research innovation for our society,” said Stony Brook University President
Maurie McInnis. “We are thrilled to partner with the University of Massachusetts Lowell
and industry in this initiative — to together discover new ways to ensure energy resiliency
for the future.”
Stony Brook’s two New York State Centers of Excellence — the Advanced Energy Research
and Technology Center (AEC) and the Center of Excellence for Wireless and Information Technology (CEWIT) — will assist University researchers involved in the program. Both Centers of Excellence
are funded through the Empire State Development’s Division of Science, Technology
and Innovation (NYSTAR), which fosters industry R&D collaboration to promote economic
growth. Utility and industry connections are also a key external resource.
Essential partners in the collaborative project include the DOE Office of Science-funded
Energy Frontier Research Center for Mesoscale Transport Properties (m2m) and the New York State Center for Advanced Technology in Integrated Electric Energy
Systems (CIEES) — both located in the AEC. CIEES industry partners Bren-Tronics (Commack, NY) and
Ioxus (Oneonta, NY) and AEC incubator tenant StorEn will contribute storage hardware
and expertise to the initiative.

The Advanced Energy Research and Technology Center is one Stony Brook’s NYSTAR Centers
of Excellence that will assist researchers involved in the U.S. Navy-funded program.
“This research program comes as the energy industry is experiencing greater technological
change than at any time in the last century,” said Yacov Shamash, Principal Investigator
and Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Stony Brook University. “That’s why the Stony Brook and UMass Lowell projects leverage
deep energy research experience with academic knowledge and long-time institutional
collaborations with utilities in their states.”