Bruno Georges Pollet

Bruno Georges Pollet (born in 1969 in Orléans, France) is a professor in renewable energy at the Department of Energy and Process Engineering at NTNU in Trondheim.

His field of research includes many aspects within electrochemistry, electrochemical energy conversion and sonoelectrochemistry[1]. This includes from the development of new materials, storage of Hydrogen, fuel cells and also water treatment/disinfection to systems, demonstrators and prototypes.[2]


He is the research group leader of «Hydrogen Energy and Sonochemistry Research group» at NTNU in Trondheim.[3]

Pollet completed his PhD in Physical Chemistry with the thesis The Effect of Ultrasound on Electrochemical Processes at the Sonochemistry Centre of Excellence, School of Chemistry, Coventry University in England. <gallery>

Bruno Pollet 8042



Career

•Visiting professor in hydrogen energy from january 2019 at the South African Institute of Advanced Materials Chemistry, University of the Western Cape[4] in South Africa.

•Leader of NTNU`s Team Hydrogen from april 2019.[5]

•Professor in renewable energy from may 2017 at the Department of Energy and Process Engineering at NTNU.

•Visiting professor since mars 2013 at the Hydrogen Safety Engineering and Research Centre, HySAFER, University of Ulster, UK.

•In 2018 member of the founding group of FREYR.[6]

•In 2008 he took part of a team of engineers who planed and started the first Hydrogen fueling station in England.[7]

•In 2007 he worked on the second generation of Hydrogen and fuel cells cars at - Microcab.[8]


Publications

List of Bruno Pollets publications in Scopus

List of Bruno Pollets publications in CRIStin

References

1. ^https://www.sonoelectrochemistry.com/

2. ^ https://www.ntnu.no/ansatte/bruno.g.pollet

3. ^ https://www.ntnu.edu/ept/pollet#/view/network

4. ^https://www.uwc.ac.za/Pages/default.aspx

5. ^ https://www.ntnu.edu/energy/hydrogen

6. ^ https://www.innoenergy.com/news-events/freyr-secures-725-million-investment-from-eit-innoenergy-to-build-a-32-gwh-battery-cell-production-facility-in-norway/

7. ^ https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1464285908702463

8. ^ http://www.microcab.co.uk/