Coming up on Wednesday April 1, RASEI is cohosting a panel discussion on careers in renewable energy with WRISE. Come and join the discussion. 4:30 - 6:00 PM in the SEEC building. calendar.colorado.edu/event/wrise-...
Coming up on Wednesday April 1, RASEI is cohosting a panel discussion on careers in renewable energy with WRISE. Come and join the discussion. 4:30 - 6:00 PM in the SEEC building. calendar.colorado.edu/event/wrise-...
Graduate student Ben Hammel, a member of RASEI Fellow Gordana Dukovicβs research group was one of eleven finalists in the CU Boulder Three Minute Thesis competition last month. Find out more about his experience making nanocrystals understandable here: www.colorado.edu/rasei/2026/0...
Aoife, who worked with RASEI Fellow Lucy Pao, is leading startup Zentus, that uses machine learning to forecast and prevent equipment failures in renewable energy installations. Check it out here:
www.colorado.edu/ecee/enginee...
Excellent update on what RASEI doctoral graduate Aoife Henry (PhDEIEngrβ24) is up to now.
Quantum dots are important materials for efficient displays, high-speed communications and low energy electronics. This collaboration details how we can tune the properties of the quantum dots by molecularly engineering the ligand structure around the quantum dots: doi.org/10.1021/acs....
Molecular-level engineering of materials offers the development of novel properties that can be exploited in new technologies. This report describes a new tool, through controlled growth of films that can influence the orientation and size of crystals in the material: doi.org/10.1063/5.03...
Reverse osmosis filters, effective for wastewater purification, are vulnerable to organic fouling and often require pretreatment. This collaborative work explores using UV light as a pretreatment method, replacing chemical additives to improve filtration performance: doi.org/10.1021/acse...
When solar cell forms a charge, a crucial component transports it to the grid. This work explores nickel oxide, a promising charge transport layer for perovskite solar cells, but it can cause perovskite decomposition. New additives prevent this breakdown: doi.org/10.1039/D5EE...
When perovskite solar cells try to operate in the shade, it can cause electrical shorting that can cause permanent damage. This study introduces a new layer that prevents this damage and provides a more stable solar cell: doi.org/10.1039/D5EL...
Special plastics can be used to accelerate the splitting of water into hydrogen, a potential clean fuel, using electricity. They are prone to fall apart. This study uses advanced microscopic techniques to understand how they decompose, providing insights for future designs: doi.org/10.1021/acsa...
Organic semiconductors promise electronics that can be tuned, are flexible, and robust. This report describes how charged atoms can be injected into the polymer to tailor their electronic properties for use in solar panels, electronics, batteries and electrocatalysts: doi.org/10.1021/acs....
Being able to control electronic charge is fundamental to how electronic and communications devices work. Being able to control this using light offers fast and energy efficient control, this collaboration describes a new organic semiconductor that can offer such control: doi.org/10.1021/acs....
Researchers have been exploring how you can layer different materials to capture more light in solar panels, like a sandwich where every layer can harvest energy. Each layer has to have specific electronic properties built into it, which is what this collaboration explores: doi.org/10.1021/acs....
Out on day 1 of 2026, this collaboration published in Science describes how perovskite solar modules can be made more stable and efficient. By designing a stronger molecular layer of phosphonic acids, these solar cells keep working longer and lose less power over time. doi.org/10.1126/scie...
RASEI January 2026 Research Roundupπ‘π§ͺ
The RASEI community started out fast in 2026, with 10 papers published in January π. These cover a wide range of topics from how we can make wastewater purification more efficient to how electrons move in one-molecule thick films!
Congratulations to all the presenters, Check out a 3MT near you! The recording will be online soon! www.colorado.edu/graduatescho...
RASEI Graduate student Ben Hammel, a member of the Dukovic Group, participated in the CU Boulder 2026 3MT competition last week. Ben was one of 11 graduate students who presented, which made for an evening of exciting and interesting stories.
The Three Minute Thesis (3MT) is an academic competition that challenges graduate students to hone their presentation skills and present the premise and results of their entire thesis in just three minutes.
www.colorado.edu/graduatescho...
In addition to the four RASEI Fellows, this work includes the Ginger Group at the University of Washington, and was part of the U.S. National Science Foundation STC, IMOD. imod-stc.org
This research shows that through careful design of the ligand structure, the properties of the whole quantum dot can be changed, important in their application in different devices and technologies.
Quantum Dots, the materials found in QLED displays, and at the forefront of light driven communication, require a layer of what we call ligands β these are essentially a protective layer from their surroundings. www.colorado.edu/rasei/2026/0...
Just out in Chemistry of Materials, this highly collaborative article, that includes four RASEI Fellows, describes how you can tune the properties of quantum dots, important materials for displays, communications, and new, more energy efficient, electronic technologies.
Find out more about how the team proposes that better understanding the details around these buried interfaces is key to improving these devices in the highlight here:
www.colorado.edu/rasei/2026/0...
Solar cells using this new molecule set new benchmarks, able to run under continuous bright light for nearly 3,000 hours, only losing 10% of their efficiency, a level of durability not previously seen for this class of solar cell.
This layer is just one molecule thick, and made up of a class of molecules called phosphonic acids. This collaboration designed and tested a series of different phosphonic acids and identified ones that could carry charge, and stuck tightly to the other layers.
This dropped the efficiency of the solar cell and led to significant reductions in the operational lifetime of the solar devices.
Solar cells are made up from a series of layers, all of which have specific designed roles in converting light to electricity. It was found that one of these was not bonding strongly enough, and when it came loose, was actually poisoning the other layers.
Out last week in Science, a collaboration involving RASEI Director Seth Marder, that uses a molecular engineering approach to develop more robust and efficient solar cells.
doi.org/10.1126/scie...
Check out our highlight of the work here: www.colorado.edu/rasei/2026/0...
In addition to the great scientific value of these studies, the videos captured are quite amazing, providing an exciting window into the precise workings of this microscopic world.