Skip to main content
Berkeley Lab
  • About the lab
  • News
  • Careers

Top Bar

  • Energy Technologies Area
  • Intranet
Home
  • Research Themes +

    Energy Technologies Area (ETA) researchers are continually building on the strong scientific foundation we have developed over the past 50 years. We address the world’s most pressing climate challenges by bringing to market energy-efficient innovations across the buildings, transportation, and industrial sectors. ETA is at the forefront of developing better batteries for electric vehicles; improving the country's aging electrical grid and innovating distributed energy and storage solutions; developing grid-interactive, efficient buildings; and providing the most comprehensive market and data analysis worldwide for renewable technologies like wind and solar.

    • Tackling the Climate Crisis
    • Decarbonizing via Integrated Energy Systems
    • Storage: The Key to Climate Solutions
    • Advancing Water-Energy Systems
    • Energy Equity & Environmental Justice
    • Prioritizing Energy Efficiency
    • Innovation Economy
  • Strategic Initiatives +

    The Energy Technologies Area (ETA) Strategic Plan is the guiding force for our research and development for the next ten years. It clearly charts a path toward clean-energy solutions and focuses on five detailed Strategic Initiatives. The Plan provides an in-depth look at how ETA is accelerating research to provide affordable, clean energy to all while accomplishing deep, economy-wide decarbonization, looking to avoid a rise in global average temperature while simultaneously developing solutions to increase humanity's resilience to extreme weather volatility.

    • Resilience
    • Energy Storage
    • Integrated Energy Systems
    • Water–Energy Nexus
    • Science for Manufacturing
  • Publications
  • News +

    For media inquiries,
    please contact ETA
    Interim Communications Manager
    Kiran Julin

    kjulin@lbl.gov

    • Multimedia +
      • Video & Animation
      • Our Websites
    • Social Media
    • Media Outreach
    • Join Our Mailing LIst
  • About Us +

    The Energy Technologies Area (ETA) is unique in translating fundamental scientific discoveries into scalable technology adoption. Our approach combines an understanding of the marketplace and the role of state and federal regulation and policies. ETA's research drives real-world, practical results that affect and improve the everyday lives of Americans and those across the globe. Saving energy and battling the Climate Crisis are key to the foundation of our research, which is driven by technoeconomic analysis and in-lab experimentation and discovery.

    • About Us +
      • Diversity
      • Staff
      • ETA Safety
      • Mentoring
    • Software Tools
    • Divisions +
      • Building Technology & Urban Systems
      • Energy Analysis & Environmental Impacts
      • Energy Storage & Distributed Resources

Publications by Research Area

Buildings
Demand Response
Electricity Markets & Policy
Energy Efficiency
Energy Storage
Industrial Energy Analysis
Renewable Energy
Sustainable Energy & Environmental Systems
Transportation

Publications

Publications by Division

Building Technology (BTUS)
Energy Analysis (EAEI)
Energy Storage (ESDR)

2006

Nytsch-Geusen, Christoph, Thilo Ernst, Peter Schwarz, Mathias Vetter, Andreas Holm, Juergen Leopold, Alexander Mattes, Andre Nordwig, Peter Schneider, Christoph Wittwer, Thierry Stephane Nouidui, and Gerhardt Schmidt."Advanced modeling and simulation techniques in MOSILAB: A system development case study."5th International Modelica Conference (2006) pp.63-72.
Nytsch-Geusen, Christoph, Andre Nordwig, Mathias Vetter, Christoph Wittwer, Thierry Stephane Nouidui, and Peter Schneider."MOSILAB: Ein Modelica-Simulationswerkzeug zur energetischen Gebäude- und Anlagensimulation."16. Symposium Thermische Solarenergie (2006).

2005

Nytsch-Geusen, Christoph, Thilo Ernst, Peter Schneider, Mathias Vetter, Andreas Holm, Juergen Leopold, Ullrich Doll, Andre Nordwig, Peter Schwarz, Christoph Wittwer, Thierry Stephane Nouidui, Gerhardt Schmidt, and Alexander Mattes."MOSILAB: Development of a modelica based generic simulation tool supporting modal structural dynamics."4th International Modelica Conference (2005) pp.527-534.
©2023 Energy Technologies Area, Berkeley Lab

OUR ORGANIZATION

  • Join our Mailing List
  • Organizational Charts
  • History
  • Intranet (staff only)

OUR DIVISIONS

  • Building Technology & Urban Systems
  • Energy Analysis & Environmental Impacts
  • Energy Storage & Distributed Resources
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • twitter
  • instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • facebook
  • youtube
  • DOE logo
  • UC logo
A U.S. Department of Energy National Laboratory Managed by the University of California
Questions & Comments Privacy & Security Notice