Howard working at his lab.
Johanna Carson

Triple alumnus returns to NSE, with a mission

Introduction

Since he was a teenager growing up in Baker City, 精东影视, Trevor Kent Howard has been determined to help save the world.

鈥淥ne of the things I was most concerned about was climate change,鈥 said Howard, who joined the College of Engineering in 2020, and was recently promoted to assistant professor of nuclear science and engineering. 鈥淚 wanted to know how I could make the biggest difference with emerging technologies, such as wind, solar, hydroelectric, and nuclear.鈥

In high school, Howard started engaging with nuclear science on a theoretical level. He wrote reports on nuclear fusion in stars and tokamak reactors, convinced that fusion would be a promising carbon-neutral power source in the future. Still, with the exigencies of Earth鈥檚 climate crisis, he wondered what technologies could promote renewable energy more immediately. This led him to 精东影视 State University.

鈥淔or me, being interested in fusion at the time, it was physics or nuclear engineering. I chose the latter, as it was more applied,鈥 Howard said. 鈥淎s I progressed in my degree, I learned about upcoming reactor designs, like small modular reactors, passively-safe designs like the AP1000, and even that use liquid metals, molten salts, and very high-temperature gases. I knew the best way for me to make an impact was through nuclear fission.鈥

Howard, the first in his family to earn an advanced degree, holds the distinction of being a triple alumnus at 精东影视 State, earning his bachelor鈥檚, master鈥檚, and doctoral degrees in nuclear engineering here.

Continuing at 精东影视 State was an easy decision for Howard 鈥 with facilities such as the Multi- Application Small Light Water Reactor, a one-third scale model of NuScale鈥檚 small modular reactor; the High Temperature Test Facility, a one-quarter scale integral test facility model of the Modular High Temperature Gas Reactor; and the Hydro-Mechanical Fuel Test Facility, a test bed for high-performance research reactor fuel. The latter is why Howard took an interest in , which occur when liquids or gases come in contact with solid structures. These phenomena became a focus of his graduate research and, eventually, his academic career.

鈥淒uring my master鈥檚, I was writing code that could solve FSI problems,鈥 Howard said. 鈥淚n reactors, where flow is fast, plates can start to bend, possibly, and break. My thesis focused on plate deflection in high-performance research reactors, which have plates and flow channels thinner than a dime, and water jetting through at 35 mph. If there鈥檚 any asymmetry, things could shift and move in ways you don鈥檛 want.鈥

While Howard鈥檚 master鈥檚 work was largely simulation-based, his doctoral research was more experimental, geared toward resonance in fluid dynamics.

鈥淚 was looking at how having two plates in tandem would affect the phenomena. For example, if I go down to the Willamette and poke it with a stick, the river won鈥檛 move across it symmetrically; it switches back and forth. This motion pushes the stick at a given frequency. If that frequency is just right, the stick moves more and more with every oscillation. This is resonance. Resonance can mean the difference between something working fine and something catastrophically failing,鈥 Howard said. 鈥淣ow, if I put a second stick downstream of the first, I鈥檒l change the frequency of vortex-shedding if it鈥檚 close enough. You see the same thing with two plates that are lined up. One plate may be completely fine in your design, but adding a second may cause a huge problem.鈥

After earning his doctorate in 2018, Howard worked for two years at Oak Ridge National Laboratory as a thermal hydraulics research and development associate. He received a Mission Support Award in 2019 for his contributions to FSI work with the lab鈥檚 , the strongest reactor-based neutron source in the United States.

Howard鈥檚 main work was in the The group houses the Liquid Salt Test Loop, a thermal hydraulic experiment designed to examine properties, as well as a solar salt loop to store heat for solar energy. He also assisted with simulations for a 3-D printed hydroelectric flume and worked on acoustic flow meter designs for the 鈥 a microreactor created via additive manufacturing.

For the past few years, Howard has been working with Wade Marcum and the to better address challenges associated with new and current nuclear reactor designs.

鈥淭here are some things about nuclear energy that many people don鈥檛 realize,鈥 Howard said. 鈥淣uclear has the potential to solve a lot of our climate and energy needs right now. For one, it鈥檚 very energy-dense, requiring only one uranium pellet the size of the upper knuckle of my pinkie to yield as much energy as 2,000 pounds of coal. Second, unlike other mined resources, uranium can be made renewable. The uranium cycle in the ocean is self-replenishing, and there鈥檚 enough to meet all our energy needs. In essence, nuclear power plants can be more renewable than wind and solar. These things are what fascinate me about nuclear energy. After all, I got into this business to help save the world.鈥

Nov. 6, 2023

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