Energy Frontier Research in Extreme Environments (EFree)
Director
Russell Hemley
Lead Institution
Carnegie Institution of Washington
Year Established
2009
Mission
To accelerate the discovery and synthesis of energy materials using extreme conditions.
Research Topics
catalysis (heterogeneous), solar (photovoltaic), solar (fuels), phonons, thermal conductivity, thermoelectric, energy storage (including batteries and capacitors), hydrogen and fuel cells, superconductivity, defects, charge transport, mesostructured materials, materials and chemistry by design, synthesis (novel materials)
Materials Studied
Materials: semiconductor, wide band-gap semiconductor, oxide, ceramic, glass, porous, optoelectronic and metamaterial
Interfaces: gas/solid, liquid/solid, solid/solid
Nanostructured Materials: 1D, nanocomposites
Experimental and Theoretical Methods
X-ray diffraction and scattering, X-ray imaging, X-ray spectroscopy, electron microscopy, scanning probe microscopy, neutron diffraction and scattering, neutron spectroscopy, molecular dynamics (MD), density functional theory (DFT), monte carlo (MC), quantum mechanics, next generation optimization methods
Partner Institutions
- California Institute of Technology
- Carnegie Institution of Washington
- Colorado School of Mines
- Cornell University
- George Washington University
- Lehigh University
- Pennsylvania State University
- University of Tennessee