Three University Centers Receive $8.7 Million

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Three teams of researchers at the University of Arkansas will receive $8.7 million over five years in a cooperative agreement between the National Science Foundation and the Arkansas Science & Technology Authority. The funds will be used to establish two new centers – the Green Renewable Energy Efficient Nanoplasmonic Solar Cells Center, known as GREEN, and the Vertically Integrated Center for Transformative Energy Research, known as VICTER. The agreement also will continue the funding for a third center – the Plant Powered Production Center, or P3.

The funds are part of $24 million for the state, which includes $20 million from NSF and $4 million from ASTA. They will be used statewide for research into advances in cost-efficient solar power and the electric power grid, as well as for innovative approaches to research in plants.

“We are thrilled to be part of this multi-institution initiative,” said G. David Gearhart, chancellor of the University of Arkansas. “This agreement and the research that will ensue have the potential to put Arkansas on the map in solar energy and power electronics, as well as in the field of plant molecular biology.”

Two of the three centers will focus on different aspects of solar cell technology – an efficient form of renewable energy that has the potential to solve some of the world’s energy problems, if certain barriers can be overcome.

“There are two challenges facing solar energy today – storage and cost,” said Vasu Varadan, Distinguished Professor of electrical engineering and George M. and Boyce W. Billingsley Chair in Engineering and principal investigator for GREEN. “But the bottom line is what you are going to pay on your electric bill. That’s what counts.”

Most of the cost of solar cells comes from the silicon used to absorb the sunlight. Although the silicon coating is only 100 microns thick, it still accounts for about 60 percent of the cost of a solar cell, Varadan said. Her research group is working on reducing the silicon coating to 200 to 400 nanometers, or one-sixth to one-eighth of the thickness of current solar cells.

“The challenge in making the silicon coating thin is that there is not enough thickness for the light to be absorbed,” Varadan said. Her laboratory specializes in materials with optical properties that can work on the front end of a device to make the ultrathin silicon absorb sunlight more effectively.

“We believe that we can create economical, efficient solar cells in this way,” Varadan said.

The other center, VICTER, will have a slightly broader focus, said Alan Mantooth, professor of electrical engineering, executive director of the National Center for Reliable Electric Power Transmission and holder of the Twenty-First Century Endowed Chair in Mixed-signal Integrated Circuit Design and Computer-Aided Design.
“We’re interested in taking these new photovoltaic materials and determining how to make a new device out of them and package them,” Mantooth said. “We want to take the materials they make to the electrical grid.” The center will pursue the creation of more energy-efficient solar cells, but also will address the challenges of packaging solar cells and creating solar panels to make them efficient, rugged and cost-effective. Further, VICTER researchers will focus on next generation solar inverter technology, the electronics device that converts the DC power from the panels to AC power for the grid.

“We’ll go all the way from the sun to the grid,” he said. They will use test bed solar systems already in place at the Enterprise Center in the Arkansas Research and Technology Park and also at the Fayetteville Public Library to test novel solar cells and solar inverters made with novel materials.

“A lot of innovations come down to new materials,” Mantooth said. “This has broad implications beyond electronics at the University of Arkansas.”

These projects also include funding to attract students to the field. The GREEN Center will create state-of-the-art undergraduate laboratories at three universities in Arkansas. There will be an optics laboratory at Philander Smith College, a solar cell characterization laboratory at University of Arkansas, Pine Bluff and a solar power station building laboratory at the University of Arkansas, Fort Smith. The center also will feature a “GREEN mobile,” which will consist of a trailer filled with solar energy demonstrations and experiments. Researchers will take the “GREEN mobile” on the road to classrooms across Arkansas to help inform students about solar energy in an entertaining way, with the hopes of interesting students in pursuing careers in the field.

“Students are essential to what we are doing, because they will be the ones who take the technology and convert it into a business,” Mantooth said.

The third project, known as Plant Powered Production, or P3, is a continuation of a three-year grant received in 2007 from NSF and ASTA. Spearheaded by Arkansas State University and led on the University of Arkansas campus by plant pathology professor Ken Korth, this project has brought researchers with different expertise from different campuses together to collaborate on plant-related research.

“Ultimately, we want to understand the ways in which plants can be used to improve human and environmental health,” Korth said. "New frontiers of plant research of antioxidants, antimicrobial agents and targeted gene insertion can be explored in rich detail.”

This NSF Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research agreement is the second of its kind funded under the Arkansas ASSET Initiative (Advancing and Supporting Science, Engineering and Technology), which is designed to boost progress in scientific research areas developing in Arkansas. The first funding in the ASSET Initiative was awarded in August of 2007.

The Arkansas Science & Technology Authority was created by statute in 1983 with the mission to bring the benefits of science and advanced technology to the people and state of Arkansas. This mission is addressed by strategies to promote scientific research, technology development, business innovation, and math, science and engineering education.

Members of the Green Renewable Energy-Efficient Nanoplasmonic Solar Cells Center

University of Arkansas

Vasundara Varadan, electrical engineering (principal investigator)
Hameed Naseem, electrical engineering
Shui-Qing (Fisher) Yu, electrical engineering
Keith Roper, chemical engineering

University of Arkansas, Little Rock

Tar-pin Chen (co-PI), physics
Hye-won Seo, physics
Jing Biao Cui, physics
Abhijit Bhattacharyya, applied science

Philander Smith College

Inyong Park

University of Arkansas, Pine Bluff

Charles Colen Jr.

University of Arkansas, Fort Smith

John Martini

Members of the Vertically Integrated Center for Transformative Energy Research

University of Arkansas

Alan Mantooth, electrical engineering (principal investigator)
Ajay Malshe, mechanical engineering (co-PI)
Greg Salamo, physics
Ryan Tian, chemistry
Min Zou, mechanical engineering
Omar Manasreh, electrical engineering
Juan Balda, electrical engineering
Simon Ang, electrical engineering
Roy McCann, electrical engineering

Arkansas State University

Robert Engelken, electrical engineering (co-PI)
Bruce Johnson
Zariff Chaudhury

University of Arkansas, Little Rock

Alex Biris (co-PI)
Brian Berry
Ganesh Kannarpady
Anindya Ghosh

University of Arkansas, Pine Bluff

Mansour Mortazavi (co-PI)

T. A. Walton, managing director of the National Center for Reliable Electric Power Transmission at the University of Arkansas, will be in charge of outreach and diversity for both GREEN and VICTER.

Members of the Plant Powered Production team

University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture

Ken Korth, plant pathology (co-PI)
Julie Carrier, biological and agricultural engineering (co-PI)
Arkansas State University
Carole Cramer, (principal investigator)

University of Arkansas, Little Rock

University of Arkansas, Pine Bluff

University of Central Arkansas

Contacts

Vasundara Varadan, Distinguish Professor, electrical engineering
College of Engineering
479-575-5555, vvvesm@uark.edu

Alan Mantooth, professor of electrical engineering
College of Engineering
479-575-5555, mantooth@uark.edu

Ken Korth, professor@uark.edu
University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture
479-575-5555, kkorth@uark.edu

Chris Snider, communications manager
Arkansas Science & Technology Authority
501-683-4405, chris.snider@arkansas.gov

Melissa Blouin, director of science and research communication
University Relations
479-575-3033, blouin@uark.edu

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