Energy and Resource Security

Project Highlights

 
FY2021

Click on any of the project titles below to view a brief project summary,
or return to our Project Highlights page to view lists of FY21 projects in other research categories.

Project Title Project Code Project Type Project Status
Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances Removal from Water by Plasmonic-Photocatalysis 20-FS-049 Feasibility Study Final
High-Pressure Electrochemistry in Condensed Gases and Supercritical Fluids 21-LW-057 Lab-Wide Continuing
Manufacturing Molecules for the Carbon Economy 19-SI-005 Strategic Initiative Final
Encoding High Specificity and Multiplexing in Nanoporous Gas Sensors 21-ERD-024 Exploratory Research Continuing
Advanced Membranes for Electrochemical Technologies 21-ERD-013 Exploratory Research Continuing
Radiative Cooling of Any Sky-Facing Surface 21-LW-006 Lab-Wide Continuing
Improving Durability in the Next Generation of Photovoltaic Materials Through Discovery and Mitigation of Interface-Based Degradation Mechanisms 20-ERD-060 Exploratory Research Continuing
Exploring Whether Subsurface Fluid Production can Minimize Triggered Seismicity in Geothermal Fields 21-FS-044 Feasibility Study Continuing
Gallium Nitride Superjunction Fin Field Effect Transistor 21-ERD-036 Exploratory Research Continuing
High-Flux Electrochemical Synthesis of Ammonia in Ionic Liquid 20-FS-022 Feasibility Study Final
Regeneration of Carbon Dioxide Sorbents by Joule Heating: Improving Energy Efficiency and Net Carbon in Direct Air Capture 21-FS-017 Feasibility Study Final
Transfer of Deep Reinforcement Learning from Simulation to the Road to Reduce Automotive Fuel Consumption 21-FS-043 Feasibility Study Final
Support-Free Adsorbents for Intensification of Carbon Dioxide Capture from the Air 21-FS-006 Feasibility Study Final
Engineering Phase Transformations in Metal Hydrides for High-Temperature Energy Storage 21-FS-005 Feasibility Study Final
Fiber Optic System for Direct Detection of Carbon Dioxide Leakage in Carbon Storage Wells 21-FS-003 Feasibility Study Continuing