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Thermal management enabling longevities in (electric) Energy Transformative Technologie: ThermEnTrans
Details
Locations:Brazil, Canada, France, Greece, India, Ireland, Japan, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, South Africa, Switzerland, UK, USA
Start Date:Jan 1, 2026
End Date:Dec 31, 2029
Contract value: EUR 1,753,500
Sectors: Energy, Heating & Cooling systems, Research & Innovation
Description
Programme(s): HORIZON.1.2 - Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA)
Topic(s): HORIZON-MSCA-2024-SE-01-01 - MSCA Staff Exchanges 2024
Funding Scheme : HORIZON-TMA-MSCA-SE - HORIZON TMA MSCA Staff Exchanges
Call for proposal: HORIZON-MSCA-2024-SE-01
Grant agreement ID: 101236597
Project description:
Cooling the future with thermal management technology
New transformative technology from electric vehicles to smartphones is becoming ever more powerful, creating demand for improved energy storage systems. Increased use also brings new challenges in managing heat to prevent overheating and fires. Supported by the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions programme, the ThermEnTrans project advances phase-change thermal management technologies, which offer more effective cooling and heating than traditional methods. Building on previous research, ThermEnTrans unites universities and industry partners to develop multiscale frameworks for scaling up these systems. The collaboration provides cutting-edge training for about 50 doctoral researchers, along with access to exclusive facilities, fostering innovation in thermal management. Through workshops and schools across continents, ThermEnTrans strengthens Europe’s leadership in energy-transition technologies while bridging academia and industry.
Objective
Modern devices require energy transition technologies to power them. These include electric vehicles, photovoltaic panels, and high-speed microprocessors. However, our insatiable demand for speed and power means that energy storage devices are becoming larger with higher capacity. Such unregulated scale-up of devices, comes with increased risks of over-heating and fires. Therefore, ensuring system longevities requires further understanding of the effect of scale-up on heat dissipated. This will help us design systems to remove this heat, which enables longevities improving energy utilisation and minimising waste. Liquid-gas or solid-liquid phase-change thermal management offers an alternative to single-phase cooling/heating. This work builds on our previous RISE project (EC-H2020-RISE-ThermaSMART-778104) that upskilled over 50 students to obtain doctoral and masters degrees, and led to over 75 publications. ThermEnTrans will focus on understanding and developing the necessary multiscale frameworks to scale-up phase-change thermal management systems enabling immediate take-up by industry. This is via collaboration between 16 top universities from Europe, Asia, Africa, North America and South America, and 4 EU industries with expertise in precision experiments, micro-fabrication, theoretical modelling, numerical simulations, batteries and cooling systems design. Our collaboration will enable knowledge transfer, access to exclusive facilities (at MIT, Georgia Tech, York Toronto, TIFR Bangalore, Kyushu) and training of around 50 doctoral researchers in latest experimental, modelling, design and scale-up methods. Besides regular meetings, we will have annual workshops (Thessaloniki, London, Fukuoka and Atlanta) and training schools (Edinburgh, MIT, Warsaw, Bangalore and Pretoria). This will consolidate the EU’s position at the forefront of cutting-edge research in this crucial area and promote long-sustaining collaboration between academia and industry.


