ESP Biography
AMY MCKEOWN-GREEN, Stanford graduate student researching 2D materials
Major: Physical Chemistry/Chemistry College/Employer: Stanford Year of Graduation: G |
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Brief Biographical Sketch:
Amy McKeown-Green is a 3rd year chemistry graduate student at Stanford university. As a researcher in Prof. Jennifer Dionne's lab, Amy has developed a passion for nanochemistry and plasmonics. She has worked to share this passion for materials through chemical education and has taught a class on Crystals for Harnessing and Controlling Energy which serves as an introduction for high-school students interested in crystal structure, photovoltaics, nanocrystals, and quantum materials as well as their applications in energy capture and storage technologies. Past Classes(Clicking a class title will bring you to the course's section of the corresponding course catalog)S7938: Crystals for Harnessing and Controlling Energy in Splash Spring 2024 (May. 18 - 19, 2024)
Energy -- making it, storing it, using it, and doing it all sustainably -- is one of the biggest challenges facing the world. Crystals are beautiful, intriguing, and claimed by many enthusiastic bloggers to have elusive properties for controlling and harnessing our inner energies. But in the world of real science, crystals are perhaps more exciting and powerful than any blogger imagined--including harnessing, storing, and controlling energy in the 21st century! We will talk about how the chemistry and physics of crystals leads to exciting properties and applications to solar cells for catching sunlight, batteries for storing energy, catalysts for clean fuels, and maybe even superconductors. In addition to materials already in use, we will explore future energy applications involving cutting edge nano- and quantum-materials. Along the way, we will learn about bonding, lattices, band structure, surfaces, and other fundamentals of material science underlying these critical applications.
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