NSTC/AMPAC/CREOL Distinguished Seminar Series: “Three
Dimensionally Structured Materials for Energy Storage and Light Harvesting”-
Paul Braun
Tuesday, March 17, 2015 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
HEC Room 101
HEC Room 101
Celebrating the International Year of Light 2015
Abstract:
Over the past decade, the sophistication of self and
directed-assembly approaches for functional composite structures has increased
dramatically, however, application of such structures in real-world systems has
remained largely elusive, in part because such structures almost always contain
finite defect densities. The storing, generating and harvesting of
photons and electrons presents a unique opportunity for self-assembled
composite materials. These applications are not only generally much more
defect tolerant than for example self-assembled computational electronics, but
also for these areas to make a substantive impact on the world energy
situation, they must be produced in exceptionally large volume. In my
talk, I will attempt to capture the state-of-the-art in highly functional
self-assembled three-dimensional composites for energy harvesting and storage
illustrated with examples from both my research and other groups with a
particular focus on high charge and discharge rate nanostructured electrochemical
energy storage systems (batteries and supercapacitors), and photonic crystals
which exhibit unprecedented control over the absorption and emission of light
(lasers, LEDs, and solar cells).
Biography:
Paul V. Braun is the Ivan Racheff Professor of Materials
Science and Engineering, and an affiliate of the Department of Chemistry, the
Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering, the Frederick Seitz Materials
Research Laboratory, the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology,
and the Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign. Prof. Braun’s research focuses on the synthesis and
properties of 3D architectures with a focus on materials with unique optical,
electrochemical, thermal, and mechanical properties. Prof. Braun received his
B.S. degree with distinction from Cornell University in 1993, and his Ph.D. in
Materials Science and Engineering from Illinois in 1998. Following a
postdoctoral appointment at Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies, he joined the
faculty at Illinois in 1999. Prof. Braun has co-authored a book, authored about
200 peer-reviewed publications, been awarded multiple patents, and has
co-founded two companies. He is the recipient of the Young Alumnus Award
(2011), the Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel Research Award (2010), the Stanley H.
Pierce Faculty Award (2010), Beckman Young Investigator Award (2001), a 3M
Nontenured Faculty Award, the 2002 Robert Lansing Hardy Award from TMS, the
Xerox Award for Faculty Research (2004, 2009), and multiple teaching awards. In
2006, he was named a University Scholar by the University of Illinois, and in
2011 was named the Ivan Racheff Professor of Materials Science and Engineering.
For additional information:
Debashis Chanda
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