My research goal is to obtain comprehensive understanding of transport phenomena and structural/phase transitions at internal interfaces and surfaces of inorganic materials. I seek to establish a research program that will develop interface structure-property relationships through computational investigations to enable design of nanostructured materials. My group will address the scientific grand challenge of designing materials with atom-by-atom control and the technological grand challenge of low-cost energy production, high-density energy storage, and no-loss energy distribution.
In the immediate future my research group will focus on the technological areas of
accelerating ion transport in nanostructured ceramics for solid-oxide fuel cells
storing/retrieving hydrogen easily in metals such as magnesium nanoparticles
increasing realizable lithium storage capacity of nanostructured silicon
trapping/removing radiation induced defects in nanostructured structural materials
We will strive to advance surface and interface science through
comprehensive understanding of transport phenomena at buried interfaces in ceramics, metals, and earth-abundant materials such as silicon and magnesium
comprehensive understanding of interface phase transitions
development of atomistically-informed analytical and mesoscopic models that relate interface properties to its structure
In pursuing above mentioned scientific and technological goals, we will
develop computational methods to study atomic structure and phenomena not accessible by existing ones such as transport by collective motion of atoms
develop empirical potentials that describe accurately
charge distribution and transfer at ceramic-ceramic and metal-ceramic interfaces
chemical reactions such as hydrogenation of magnesium and lithiation of silicon
participate in multi-investigator programs, especially with experimental investigators