The Car Pi: Invisible radiation converted by metamaterials will power the electrical vehicles of tomorrow
New Member of Neutrino Energy Groups Scientific Advisory Board to Develop Electric Car with Metamaterials
In India and elsewhere around the globe, consumers are being incentivized to purchase electric cars under the pretense that these types of vehicles are better for the environment. While it's true that electric vehicles have the potential to reduce emissions, charging electric car batteries with conventional electrical grids, which primarily use coal to generate energy, could actually worsen the crisis caused by fossil fuel emissions.
Recently, the Neutrino Energy Group was proud to welcome Dr. Bharat Bhanudas Kale of Pune, Maharashtra into its international organization of pioneering energy scientists. Dr. Kale has been selected to be part of the spearhead of the Neutrino Energy Group's Car Pi project.
With over 20 patents to his name, Dr. Bharat Bhanudas Kale has more than 250 international journal publications, and nearly 30 years of experience in sustainable energy and nanomaterial technologies, Dr. Kale is one of India's most prominent research scientists in some of the world's most significant scientific fields. He is a founding member of the Centre for Materials for Electronics Technology (C-MET) in Pune, and in 2020, he was recognized as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry in London.
Dr. Kale's extensive experience in the field of sustainable energy technologies already made him a great fit for the Neutrino Energy Group, but it was his additional expertise in novel nanomaterials that truly sealed the deal. For quite some time, the Neutrino Energy Group has been attempting to develop a brand-new method of consumer conveyance that uses neutrino energy instead of coal-generated electricity or fossil fuels, and Dr. Kale's research into metamaterials made him the perfect scientist to bring this project to fruition.
The Car Pi: Invisible radiation converted by metamaterials will power the electrical vehicles of tomorrow