Lorenzo Trombetti
Institution: University of Perugia - Metal Energy Carrier Expert
Country: Italy
Dr. Lorenzo Trombetti was born in Rome, Italy, in 1990. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in energy engineering from the University of Rome “La Sapienza” in 2015. He then achieved a master’s degree in industrial engineering at the University of Perugia “UniPG” in 2018. He completed his professional training achieving a Ph.D. in industrial engineering at UniPG focused on reactive metals used as energy carriers in 2022. The results obtained earned him the position he currently holds as a fellow researcher at the University of Perugia.
His specialized skills encompass all aspects of metal energy carriers, from chemistry notions to system simulations to engineering competencies in workbench design. The years following the Ph.D. qualification were also spent acquiring Solid Oxide Fuel Cell (SOFC) expertise, LabVIEW qualifications, and Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) expertise.
Currently, Lorenzo is actively contributing to two impactful projects: the Erasmus+ project "STEAM-Active" and the INSTM "SCORE" project. The first one is aimed at enhancing the educational offer of high schools and universities in the engineering field. The second one is aimed at providing an innovative way for the photoreduction of carbon dioxide to useful carbon-based products.
His specialized skills encompass all aspects of metal energy carriers, from chemistry notions to system simulations to engineering competencies in workbench design. The years following the Ph.D. qualification were also spent acquiring Solid Oxide Fuel Cell (SOFC) expertise, LabVIEW qualifications, and Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) expertise.
Currently, Lorenzo is actively contributing to two impactful projects: the Erasmus+ project "STEAM-Active" and the INSTM "SCORE" project. The first one is aimed at enhancing the educational offer of high schools and universities in the engineering field. The second one is aimed at providing an innovative way for the photoreduction of carbon dioxide to useful carbon-based products.