🌿 Part 1 of 4: A Week at KTH – Teaching, Tinkering, and Tasting the Pulse of Nordic Energy Innovation

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From Python Puzzles to 700°C Sand: A Visiting Lecturer’s Journey in Stockholm


I’m still buzzing from an incredible week in Stockholm, where I had the honour of serving as a visiting lecturer at KTH Royal Institute of Technology — a true epicentre of energy research and innovation.

As an R&D Leader at PNDC, my mission was clear: to share insights from real-world energy systems while learning from one of Europe’s most dynamic academic hubs. The week was packed — intense, inspiring, and deeply human.


🎓 Teaching the Foundations: Power Systems in Practice

I delivered a lecture on load flow analysis, contingency analysis, and optimal power flow — core tools for designing resilient, decarbonised grids.

The students were sharp, curious, and eager to connect theory with reality.

“How would this work in a grid with renewables?”
“Can we use this in islanded microgrids?”
“What happens when a line fails during peak demand?”

These weren’t just academic questions — they were the kind of challenges we face daily at PNDC. It was a powerful reminder: the future of energy is being shaped in classrooms, just as much as in labs and boardrooms.


💻 The Great Python Puzzle: When Versions Don’t Play Nice

We moved into a hands-on tutorial using pandapower, a Python library for power system analysis.

Now, here’s the twist: I’ve been using Python for years — but I’m not a coder by trade. I’ve kept my environment stable with older, tested versions.

But the students? Most were installing Python for the first time — and the latest version had broken compatibility with pandapower.

😱 Spoiler: It didn’t work.

We spent the night before the tutorial troubleshooting — trying different versions, virtual environments, and pip installs. The confusion was real. But the lesson was golden: version control is non-negotiable in applied research.

📌 Action Plan for Next Year:
We’ll provide a pre-configured virtual environment with exact versions of Python, pandas, and pandapower — along with a step-by-step setup guide. No more midnight debugging!


🔥 Inside the Labs: Where Sand, Solar, and Heat Meet

The real highlight? A tour of KTH’s High-Temperature and Low-Temperature Labs — two worlds of thermal innovation under one roof.

🔥 High-Temp Lab: Sand as a Supercharged Heat Carrier

  • 700°C experiments using sand as a fluid medium to transfer heat from concentrated solar power (CSP) plants to steam generators.
  • Fascinating detail: The diameter of pipe ends controls sand velocity — a simple, elegant way to manage flow and efficiency.
  • Pyrolysis in molten chloride salts at 400°C — exploring ways to recycle PV panels and plastics at scale. A major step toward circular energy systems.
  • High-temperature heat pumps (200–400°C) — pushing the limits of industrial decarbonisation.

❄️ Low-Temp Lab: “High” Temperature at 65°C?

  • Here, “high temperature” means 65°C — a gentle reminder: context matters, even within a single department.
  • Systems designed for district heating, building efficiency, and integration with renewables.

🌐 Beyond the Lab: Co-Creating the CETP Vision

Amidst lectures and lab tours, Jagruti and I also worked on shaping the broad objectives of the CETP (Centre for Energy Transition Partnership) — a large, multi-country consortium tackling real industry challenges.

It was intense. We worked late — Monday to Thursday, often past midnight — refining, aligning, and finding common threads across diverse partners.

There’s something deeply nostalgic about working late in a university building. It reminded me of my days at IIT Bombay, when I’d stay up until 2 a.m. finishing my thesis.

Coming out of the lab at midnight, lights still on, people laughing over coffee — it wasn’t lonely. It was alive.

(P.S. This isn’t KTH. I still haven’t taken a photo of KTH at midnight — but I promise: next year, I will.)


🚶‍♀️ Bonus: 15,000 Steps a Day in Stockholm

And yes — I did walk 15,000 steps every single day. Stockholm is a city built for walking: green spaces, canals, bridges, and a rhythm that invites exploration.

I didn’t just walk — I felt the city. The crisp air, the quiet hum of the metro, the way sunlight danced on the water.

It was a perfect blend of professional rigour and personal renewal.


✨ Final Thought

This wasn’t just a visiting lecture — it was a conversation across continents, disciplines, and cultures.

I came to teach. I left with new ideas, new connections, and a deeper belief in what’s possible when academia, industry, and passion collide.

And as I packed my bags, I carried with me not just notes and photos — but a renewed spark.


Next up in the series: Part 2 – The Golden Hall, the City Tower, and the Nail Scissors of Herta Müller
Coming soon: A journey through Stockholm’s cultural soul — where science meets art, and history whispers through every corridor.

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By Priya

Priya Bhagavathy

Proud Mom. Lead R&D Engineer at PNDC, University of Strathclyde. Oxford Martin Fellow and Oxford policy engagement network KE fellow. Interests in energy technology, policy and sustainable system. Current research areas include the decarbonisation of heat, transport and electricity and the role of hydrogen in decarbonisation.

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