Daniel Robertson Assistant Professor, Grand Challenge Scholars Program Director How will you use technology to learn? PostedNovember 4, 2020 AT 9:09 AM How will you use technology to learn? Read More
Comments on "Make Solar Energy Economical" PostedFebruary 14, 2008 AT 10:40 PM The cost of solar energy is dropping. But how low must it go for it to be widely used around the world? How much more are we willing to pay for a greener energy source? Read More
Blades of Grass Inspire Advance in Organic Solar Cells Posted10/12/2020 2:51:15 AM Using a bio-mimicking analog of one of nature’s most efficient light-harvesting structures, blades of grass, an international research team led by Alejandro Briseno of the University of Massachusetts Amherst has taken a major step in developing long-sought polymer architecture to boost power-conversion efficiency of light to electricity for use in electronic devices.Briseno, with colleagues and graduate students at UMass Amherst and others at Stanford University and Dresden University of Technology, Germany, report in the current issue of Nano Letters that by using single-crystalline organic nanopillars, or “nanograss,” they found a way to get around dead ends, or discontinuous pathways, that pose a serious drawback when using blended systems known as bulk heterojunction donor-acceptor, or positive-negative (p-n), junctions for harvesting energy in organic solar cells. Posted byRaluca Barbulescu Read More Comments0
Scott Martin Energy and Sustainable Technology Development at 8 Rivers Capital Duke University, 2014, B.S.E. Mechanical Engineering w/Minor in Chemistry and Certificate in Energy and the Environment
Oct292020 Oct 29 2020 - Nov 07 2020 Solar Impulse completes epic flight to Hawaii Solar Impulse, the aeroplane that is powered only by the sun, has landed in Hawaii after making a historic 7,200km flight across the Pacific from Japan.