Georgia Tech Named Lead Institution for $100M DOE Energy Frontier Research Center Funding

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Summaries

Summary Sentence:

The U.S. Department of Energy has selected Georgia Tech as a lead institution for its $100 million-funded Energy Frontier Research Centers (EFRC) program.

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The U.S. Department of Energy has selected Georgia Tech as a lead institution for its $100 million-funded Energy Frontier Research Centers (EFRC) program. The centers are major collaborative research efforts to accelerate high-risk, high-reward fundamental research that will provide a strong scientific basis for transformative energy technologies of the future.

Established by the Department of Energy’s Office of Science in 2009, the EFRC program brings together researchers from multiple disciplines and institutions—including universities, national laboratories, and nonprofit organizations—and combines them into synergistic, highly productive teams.
 
The current cohort of EFRCs, selected by competitive peer review, includes 22 new centers and the renewals of nine existing ones. All of the centers will be funded for up to four years. In addition, based on favorable peer review evaluations, another 11 existing centers were awarded two-year extensions to support the completion of valuable research that is still in progress.

The centers will help to accelerate scientific understanding in diverse energy-relevant fields including catalysts, electro- and photochemistry, geoscience, quantum materials, and nuclear and synthesis science.

The knowledge generated by the EFRCs will lay the scientific groundwork for future advances in solar energy, nuclear energy, energy conversion and storage, electronics and computation, production of fuels and chemicals, carbon capture, and control of the earth’s subsurface.

Since 2009, the EFRCs have produced over ten thousand peer-reviewed scientific publications and generated hundreds of inventions at various stages of the patent process, fostering a wide range of new technologies that have benefitted multiple private sector companies, both large and small.

The four-year centers will receive on average approximately $2 million to $4 million per year. Total funding for the 42 centers will be $100 million in FY 2018, with outyear funding contingent on Congressional appropriations.

Learn more about Georgia Tech Energy Frontier Research Center.

Additional Information

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SEI Energy

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Related Core Research Areas
Energy and Sustainable Infrastructure
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Keywords
DOE, energy, frontier, Research, Center, Funding, EFRC
Status
  • Created By: vkaza3
  • Workflow Status: Draft
  • Created On: Aug 11, 2021 - 4:00pm
  • Last Updated: Aug 11, 2021 - 4:00pm