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This practical guide is about the benefits on an individual, societal, and environmental basis associated with adding solar panels to parking lots and other locations to generate electricity for charging electric vehicles, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and provide vehicle shade and shelter. Its objective is to share information on pathways from our present situation to a world with a more sustainable transportation system with EVs, SPCSs. Written for all audiences, high school and college teachers and students, those in industry and government, and those involved in community issues will…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This practical guide is about the benefits on an individual, societal, and environmental basis associated with adding solar panels to parking lots and other locations to generate electricity for charging electric vehicles, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and provide vehicle shade and shelter. Its objective is to share information on pathways from our present situation to a world with a more sustainable transportation system with EVs, SPCSs. Written for all audiences, high school and college teachers and students, those in industry and government, and those involved in community issues will benefit by learning more about the topics addressed in the book.
Autorenporträt
Larry E. Erickson is professor of chemical engineering and director of the Center for Hazardous Substance Research at Kansas State University. He is one of the principal investigators on the National Science Foundation REU award and the Black and Veatch award for the project "Building a World of Difference with Solar Powered Charge Stations for Electric Vehicles". Jessica Robinson is a Class of 2016 graduate of the University of North Carolina with a Bachelor of Science degree in Environmental Science. She helped with the research and the book in the summers of 2014 and 2015 and the fall and winter of 2015. Gary Brase is professor of psychological sciences at Kansas State University. His research includes personal decision making processes. Jackson Cutsor is a Class of 2018 undergraduate student in electrical engineering at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln who helped with the research and the book while he was at Kansas State University in the summer of 2015.