Recipients of MITEI seed grants for energy research
January 2008
Seed grants
- Ultra-high efficiency thin film heterojunction solar cells using earth-abundant, scalable materials
- Tonio Buonassisi (Mechanical Engineering) and Gerbrand Ceder (Materials Science and Engineering)
- Advancing our understanding of Prochlorococcus, the Earth's smallest and most abundant photosynthetic machine
- Sallie "Penny" Chisholm (Civil and Environmental Engineering and Biology)
- Enzymatic control of pollutants and greenhouse gases
- Catherine Drennan (Chemistry)
- The health consequences of energy consumption in India
- Esther Duflo and Michael Greenstone (Economics) and Amy Smith (Mechanical Engineering)
- Remanufacturing and energy reduction potential
- Timothy Gutowski (Mechanical Engineering), Stephen Graves (Management), and Elsa Olivetti (MIT Energy Initiative)
- No watt left behind
- Steven Leeb and James Kirtley (Electrical Engineering and Computer Science) and Les Norford (Architecture)
- Harnessing collective intelligence to address global climate change
- Thomas Malone and John Sterman (Sloan School of Management), Hal Abelson, Mark Klein and David Karger (Electrical Engineering and Computer Science)
- Superconducting DC power transmission and distribution
- Joseph Minervini and Leslie Bromberg (Plasma Science and Fusion Center)
- Characterization of phonon mean free path and thermal transport in thermoelectric materials
- Keith Nelson (Chemistry) and Gang Chen (Mechanical Engineering)
- Microbial synthesis of pentanol as a biofuel
- Kristala Jones Prather (Chemical Engineering)
- Electrochemical cell evaluation and design for MIT nanotube-enhanced ultracapacitor
- Joel Schindall and John Kassakian (Electrical Engineering and Computer Science) and Donald Sadoway (Materials Science and Engineering)
- Renewable biofuels production in the oleaginous bacterium Rhodococcus
- Anthony Sinskey (Biology), Alexander van Oudenaarden (Physics), Jason Holder (Biology)
- Investigation of subsurface microbial processes during and after geological carbon sequestration
- Janelle Thompson and Roman Stocker (Civil and Environmental Engineering)
Ignition grants
- Towards a balance between light, heat and comfort: angularly and spectrally selective envelopes for energy-efficient buildings
- Marilyne Andersen (Architecture)
- Semiconductor nanowires for thermoelectric applications
- Silvija Gradecak (Materials Science and Engineering)
- Nitride-based electronics for high-efficiency power conversion
- Tomas Palacios (Electrical Engineering and Computer Science)
- Demonstrating biomimetic self-repair in photoelectrochemical energy production systems
- Michael Strano (Chemical Engineering)
- Structural characterization of organic photovoltaics and fuel-forming catalysts via designer force fields
- Troy Van Voorhis (Chemistry)
- Nano-structured alloys against corrosion in advanced nuclear plants
- Bilge Yildiz (Nuclear Science and Engineering)


