Terry
Penney
Technology Manager, FreedomCAR and Vehicle Technologies
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Terry Penney joined the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in 1979. Prior to joining NREL, he worked for Concentration, Heat and Momentum (CHAM), a consulting group headed by Prof. Brian Spalding based in London developing unique finite element computational codes for multiphase heat and mass transfer problems. He also worked at the Von Karmen Facility at the Arnold Engineering Development Center in middle Tennessee where he worked on the Space Shuttle program. At NREL he has worked on Ocean Energy, Buildings research, Optical and Thermal Fluid Science. More recently, Mr. Penney launched the Hybrid Vehicle program in 1992, which grew into the Partnership for New Generation Vehicles (PNGV) between the government and GM, Ford and DaimlerChyrsler. Currently he is NREL's Technology Manager for FreedomCAR and Advanced Vehicles responsible for both alternative fuels and advanced vehicles projects in both light and heavy-duty hybrid platforms.
Mr. Penney has more than 50 technical publications to his credit, including
energy-related articles in Scientific American and the Encyclopedia Britannica.
He has worked on computational fluid dynamics problems for a variety of applications
and has pushed math-based analysis, which has evolved simultaneous multi-physics
based tools with optimization including six-sigma, optimization and virtual
proving ground. He has 30 years experience in testing and analysis in aerodynamics,
heated mass transfer components, and advanced thermodynamic cycles, including
gas turbines. He is an SAE member, a Baldridge team competition examiner,
National Science Bowl scientific judge and winner of the Van Morris Award
for performance. His undergraduate degree was from Purdue University in Aeronautical
Engineering and Engineering Science and his graduate work was at the University
of Tennessee in Mechanical Engineering.