How are Highlights Used? 1 Answer questions about the EFRC program, often with a very short deadline Update BES and DOE management of scientific advances.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Scientific Achievement Proved that changes at the phosphorus centers of diphenylphosphine ligands alter the size of gold clusters synthesized in solution.
Advertisements

Purpose Convey current scientific and technical research results in a way that is intriguing, succinct, relevant, and easily understood by both technical.
This PowerPoint reviews middle school chemistry so that you will be able to get a jumpstart on chemistry next year.
THE LIGHT EMITTING DIODE
Photosynthesis Section 5-2.
Photosynthesis. THE BIG PICTURE Scientists discovered that in the presence of light, plants transform CO 2 and water into carbohydrates and release oxygen.
Relate the structure of chloroplasts to the events in photosynthesis
PHOTOSYNTHESIS Topics 3.8 and 8.2. State that photosynthesis involves the conversion of light energy into chemical energy State that light from the Sun.
Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration Chapter 5.
Cell Energy & Photosynthesis. Source of Energy In most living organisms the energy in most food comes from? the sun autotroph – ‘auto’ – self, ‘troph’
Raven - Johnson - Biology: 6th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Photosynthesis Light Reaction (AP) Chapter 10.
3.8.1 State that photosynthesis involves the conversion of light energy into chemical energy.(1) Location: chloroplast or prokaryotic equivalent. Reaction:
Radiopharmaceutical Production Target Foil Characteristics STOP.
Poster title goes here, containing strictly only the essential number of words... Author’s Name/s Goes Here, Author’s Name/s Goes Here, Author’s Name/s.
Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration
Light Reactions & Photosynthetic Pigments. LIGHT! Of all the light energy that reaches the earth’s surface, ~5% is transferred to carbohydrates by a leaf.
Placemat Activity: Different Types of Light Unit 4: Chapter 10 – Sources and Nature of Light (p ) Artificial Genetically modified zebrafish.
Determining the Importance of Photosynthesis and Respiration
Light. White light emits light at all wavelengths. Excitation of certain elements or the electrical excitation of certain elements give rise to an atomic.
The Sun.
Photosynthesis Chapter 8.
HW: Complete Review questions for Section 5-1 & 5-2. Due on Friday.
Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration
Photosynthesis: Where would we be without it? Where’d we leave off? In cellular respiration, cells use the energy stored in _______ (and other biomolecules)
METABOLISM The sum of all chemical reactions in an organism.
Photosynthesis.
The Atmosphere.
Organelles that capture and release energy. Before we get to the organelles, we have to look at two molecules that create the energy produced in those.
Raven - Johnson - Biology: 6th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Photosynthesis Chapter 5-6 Copyright © McGraw-Hill Companies Permission.
Photosynthesis & Cellular Respiration Chapter 5 Section 1.
PHOTOSYNTHESIS Energy & Life Biology I. Energy & Life Where does the energy that living things need come from? Plants & other organisms are able to use.
3.8 Photosynthesis (Core) State that photosynthesis involves the conversion of light energy into chemical energy State that light from the.
Photoluminescence and Photocurrent in a Blue LED Ben Stroup & Timothy Gfroerer, Davidson College, Davidson, NC Yong Zhang, University of North Carolina.
Aim: What is photosynthesis? I. Photosynthesis – the process in which green plants take in CO 2 and H 2 O in the presence of sunlight and create glucose.
Photosynthesis.
Chapter 5 part 1 Photosynthesis. Energy in living systems -photosynthesis: the process of converting light energy into chemical energy -Autotrophs: make.
Poster Title (Resist the temptation for long titles) Author A, Author B, Author C, Author D and Author E Address or affiliation, Address or affiliation,
Photosynthesis. 1. Photosynthesis uses the energy of sunlight to convert carbon dioxide into sugars. This process supplies usable energy for life on Earth.
Chapter 8 & 9 Photosynthesis & Cellular Respiration.
3 Composition of cells. Materials to build and fuel cells Symbol Element C Carbon H Hydrogen N Nitrogen O Oxygen P Phosphorus S Sulfur.
Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration 7 th Grade Science Kleb Intermediate School.
Cellular Nutrition BZ These notes are summaries of the BZ information and the answers are provided, but there is not enough time in class to discuss.
Atmosphere-ocean interactions Exchange of energy between oceans & atmosphere affects character of each In oceans –Atmospheric processes alter salinity.
Ms. Hughes Bio I.  Living things also need energy in order to stay in good repair or maintain homeostasis.  Homeostasis is the process of maitnaining.
PHOTOSYNTHESIS TOPIC 3.8 and : Objectives State that photosynthesis involves the conversion of light energy into chemical energy. State that light.
Photosynthesis Chapter 8 Cellular Energy Page 216.
AOPA 2016 Poster title goes here, containing strictly only the essential number of words... Introduction First… Keep your poster within the following limits:
Poster title goes here (change font size to keep within box)
Insert catchy graphic here.
Poster Title (use minimum number of words)
Bellwork: What is photosynthesis and why is it important in nature?
ENERGY ATP.
Photosynthesis Chapter 8.
THIS IS THE TITLE OF MY PRESENTATION IN ARIAL BOLD 36 pt FONT
Poster Title (use minimum number of words)
THIS IS THE TITLE OF MY PRESENTATION IN ARIAL BOLD 36 pt FONT
Photosynthesis: An Overview
THIS IS THE TITLE OF MY PRESENTATION IN ARIAL BOLD 36 pt FONT
We don’t do it, but we need it!
Template for DARS 2016 Digest Paper Title in One or Two Lines
Photosynthesis: An Overview
The Process of Photosynthesis
Standards 21st Century Life and Careers (2014) ST-SM.3 Analyze the impact that science and mathematics has on society. 21st Century Life and Careers.
CHAPTER 6 Photosynthesis
Chapter 7 Lecture Outline See PowerPoint Image Slides
Photosynthesis Horticulture.
Bellringer: Grab a sheet of paper from the front and answer the following: Test Reflection: How did you feel you did on the Cell Unit Test? Did you receive.
Living Organisms And The Environment:
Paper Title in One or Two Lines
P o s t e r t i t l e g o e s h e r e ADD YOUR LOGOS HERE INTRODUCTION
Presentation transcript:

How are Highlights Used? 1 Answer questions about the EFRC program, often with a very short deadline Update BES and DOE management of scientific advances Inform the public of DOE’s relevance and societal impact Provide content in presentations such as BES Advisory Committee, scientific conferences, other federal agencies, NAS, and to the Committee of Visitors (i.e., the group that evaluates each program’s effectiveness in meeting DOE’s mission and goals) Provide critical input to DOE’s annual budget request Collected by your BES POC Required during some monthly Directors phone calls Can be submitted at any time

logo Scientific Achievement (20 pt Arial, bold) One sentence (18 pt Calibri, bold) Significance and Impact One sentence Research Details – Detail #1 – can be smaller font than the text above if required, but try to stay at 16 pts or greater. 3 pt line spacing between bullets – Detail #2 Format Template – Title (Arial 24 pt, bold) (try not to use fonts smaller than those in the template) Caption (Calibri 12 pt or greater) Work was performed at … (Calibri 12 or 11 pt) – can be moved to footer Reference (Calibri 12 or 11 pt) Figure – can be located as needed on the page….

How to Build a DOE Office of Science Highlight Slide Title Attention grabbing and accessible but not exaggerated Text All text should be short and to the point – minimize words and stress significance to society Scientific Achievement – 50 words or less Significance and Impact – 50 words or less Importance, relevance, or intriguing component of the finding to the field Research Involved – Address the research approach in 2-4 bullet points Give a ~175 word detailed explanation plus additional description of figure if needed in the PowerPoint Notes section Citation Full citation with all authors’ names is preferable

How to Build a DOE Office of Science Highlight Slide Institutional logo(s) Include affiliations or institutional logos Indicate institution where research was performed (if possible); EFRC and Hub research should include those logos as well Office of Science logo Figures Visually compelling figure(s) to explain the research Include legends and descriptive caption DOE has the right to use published journal images per contractual funding agreements

Scientific Achievement Computer simulations explain why some nanostructured materials exhibit increased tolerance to radiation damage Significance and Impact Mechanism suggests new routes to self- healing of radiation damaged materials, an important advance for nuclear energy Research Details – Radiation knocks atoms out of their preferred sites creating interstitials and leaving behind vacancies – Previously, it was thought that once interstitials moved to grain boundaries they were trapped and unavailable to recombine with vacancies – Temperature-accelerated dynamics simulations showed grain-boundary interstitials can be re- emitted to combine with vacancies at a rate faster than other recombination mechanisms – Grain boundaries in designed nanostructured materials could slow down damage accumulation New Mechanism for Design of Radiation Damage Resistant Materials Xian-Ming Bai, et al., Science 327, 1631 (2010). interstitial emission Radiation damage interstitialsvacanciesgrain boundary Schematic of recombination mechanism: After irradiation interstitials migrate to the grain boundary leaving vacancies behind. Some interstitials escape the grain boundary to recombine with the vacancies several atomic distances away. The few vacancies left behind typically join to form a larger defect. Work was performed at Los Alamos National Laboratory

Scientific Achievement New calculations demonstrate that LED “droop” is dominated by multi-particle interactions. Droop occurs when increasing energy input does not produce proportionally more light. Significance and Impact Understanding “droop” may result in cheaper, more efficient LEDs; LEDs are more energy efficient, smaller, and longer-lived than incandescent lamps or fluorescent lighting Research Details – Atomistic first-principles calculations indicated that increasing amounts of indium in Indium Gallium Nitride (InGaN) green LEDs caused a decrease in light intensity – Computational data was confirmed by experimental spectroscopic evidence which showed electron-phonon coupling and alloy scattering (breaking of symmetry due to the insertion of Indium) to be important processes Understanding Drooping in Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) Upper : Images of LEDs. Middle: Phonon mediated processes substantially affect the Auger coefficient in InGaN. Lower : Droop in efficiency occurs at high carrier densities in InGaN alloys. Increases in the Indium content (x = fraction of Indium) make the droop worse. Work was performed at University of California – Santa BarbaraE. Kioupakis et al., Applied Physics Letters 2011, 98,161107

Scientific Achievement A newly synthesized nickel complex speeds the production of hydrogen ten times faster than a natural hydrogenase enzyme at room temperature Significance and Impact Opens a new research path to develop long-lived catalysts using inexpensive, earth- abundant metals to convert electrical energy to chemical energy New Catalyst Speeds Conversion of Electricity to Hydrogen Fuel Schematic showing catalyst operation 2 e H + → H 2 ML Helm, MP Stewart, RM Bullock, MR DuBois, DL DuBois Science 12 August 2011: 863 Research Details –In this process, water molecules are split to produce hydrogen and oxygen. Hydrogen can be used as a fuel –Using the natural hydrogenase enzyme as a model, a synthetic catalyst using nickel was developed. The metal atom gets its reactive properties from the groups of atoms containing phosphorous and nitrogen that surround it. –By splitting water, hydrogen gas is formed by combining the H + on the nitrogen with the H - on the nickel center –Adding an acid or water increased the rate of hydrogen produced from the newly-designed synthetic catalyst

Scientific Achievement Determined that specific pigments in the light harvesting complex found in photosynthetic bacteria act primarily to protect the cell from damage by excess sunlight Significance and Impact Provides insights on how to minimize deleterious effects from over exposure to sunlight in the design of man- made systems to gather and use the sun’s energy Research Details – In photosynthetic organisms, supplementary pigments called carotenoids capture wavelengths of light that the major pigments can not efficiently harvest – However, steady-state absorption and fluorescence spectra showed that carotenoids in the photosynthetic bacterium Thermochomatium tepidum play a negligible role in energy capture and transfer – Instead, the composition and structure of the carotenoids have been optimized to protect the light harvesting complex from sun damage Purple Bacteria Develops Its Own Form of “Sunscreen” The orange ring surrounding Grand Prismatic Spring, Yellowstone National Park, is due to carotenoid molecules, produced by huge mats of algae and bacteria (Photo from Work was performed at Washington University in St. Louis EFRC: Photosynthetic Antenna Research Center (PARC) at Washington University in St. Louis E D. M. Niedzwiedzhi et al. Photosynthesis Research 2011, 107,