Eric Hittinger
Rochester Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Eric Hittinger.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2017
Matthew J. Hoffman; Eric Hittinger
Plastic pollution in the worlds oceans has received much attention, but there has been increasing concern about the high concentrations of plastic debris in the Laurentian Great Lakes. Using census data and methodologies used to study ocean debris we derive a first estimate of 9887 metric tonnes per year of plastic debris entering the Great Lakes. These estimates are translated into population-dependent particle inputs which are advected using currents from a hydrodynamic model to map the spatial distribution of plastic debris in the Great Lakes. Model results compare favorably with previously published sampling data. The samples are used to calibrate the model to derive surface microplastic mass estimates of 0.0211 metric tonnes in Lake Superior, 1.44 metric tonnes in Huron, and 4.41 metric tonnes in Erie. These results have many applications, including informing cleanup efforts, helping target pollution prevention, and understanding the inter-state or international flows of plastic pollution.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2017
Eric Hittinger; Inês L. Azevedo
The variable and nondispatchable nature of wind and solar generation has been driving interest in energy storage as an enabling low-carbon technology that can help spur large-scale adoption of renewables. However, prior work has shown that adding energy storage alone for energy arbitrage in electricity systems across the U.S. routinely increases system emissions. While adding wind or solar reduces electricity system emissions, the emissions effect of both renewable generation and energy storage varies by location. In this work, we apply a marginal emissions approach to determine the net system CO2 emissions of colocated or electrically proximate wind/storage and solar/storage facilities across the U.S. and determine the amount of renewable energy required to offset the CO2 emissions resulting from operation of new energy storage. We find that it takes between 0.03 MW (Montana) and 4 MW (Michigan) of wind and between 0.25 MW (Alabama) and 17 MW (Michigan) of solar to offset the emissions from a 25 MW/100 MWh storage device, depending on location and operational mode. Systems with a realistic combination of renewables and storage will result in net emissions reductions compared with a grid without those systems, but the anticipated reductions are lower than a renewable-only addition.
Journal of Power Sources | 2012
Eric Hittinger; Jay F. Whitacre; Jay Apt
Angewandte Chemie | 2004
Eric Hittinger; Akshay Kokil; Christoph Weder
Energy Systems | 2010
Eric Hittinger; Jay F. Whitacre; Jay Apt
Energy Conversion and Management | 2015
Eric Hittinger; Ted Wiley; John Kluza; Jay F. Whitacre
Environmental Science & Technology | 2015
Eric Hittinger; Inês L. Azevedo
International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control | 2014
David Luke Oates; Peter Versteeg; Eric Hittinger; Paulina Jaramillo
The Electricity Journal | 2016
Nathaniel Heck; Courtney N. Smith; Eric Hittinger
Energy Procedia | 2013
Peter Versteeg; David Luke Oates; Eric Hittinger; Edward S. Rubin