• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Header Search Widget

The SALT Research Group

UC Berkeley Nuclear Engineering Department

  • | Group
    • Raluca O. Scarlat
    • Lorenzo Vergari
    • Haley Williams
    • Alexandra (Sasha) Kennedy
    • Ryan Hayes
    • Michael Borrello
    • Nathanael Gardner
    • Christian M. Sclafani, M.Eng., B.S.E.
    • Sara Mastromarino
    • Niv Moran
    • Riccardo Chebac
  • | Publications
  • | Projects
    • ThorCon Corrosion Project
    • NEUP – High Temperature Molten Salt Reactor Pump Development
    • NEUP – IRP Molten Salt Reactor Test Bed with Neutron Irradiation
    • Speciation of Light Elements in Molten Salts
    • FUTURE EFRC
    • Graphite and Tritium Studies in Molten Fluoride Salts
  • | Beryllium Safety
  • | Activities, News, Events
    • | Open House Nov. 2nd
    • | MS Round Robin 1.0
    • | Chemical Sensors Workshop 2020
    • | Molten Salt Bootcamp 2019
  • | Courses

Tony Consiglio

Email: aconsiglio4@berkeley.edu

4116 Etcheverry Hall

Tony is a 2020 Master of Science graduate in mechanical engineering. While in the SALT group, Tony studied instrumentation for molten salt reactors and designed electrochemical sensors for investigation of molten salt chemical composition. Before attending Berkeley, Tony worked on the storage and transportation of spent nuclear fuel as an operations engineer at Holtec International. Outside of the lab, Tony can be found running and riding his bike up mountains, skiing down mountains, cooking Wiener Schnitzel, or reading Kafka.

B.S. Mechanical Engineering – Virginia Tech, 2017

B.Sc. Mechanical & Process Engineering – Technische Universität Darmstadt, 2017

—

ORCID iD: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2903-0230

Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=Kw6zNlEAAAAJ&hl=en

ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Anthony_Consiglio2

Primary Sidebar

  • Berkeley Engineering
  • UC Berkeley
  • PRIVACY
  • ACCESSIBILITY
  • NONDISCRIMINATION

© 2016–2023 UC Regents   |   Log in