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Basic Energy Sciences Update
Harriet KungDirector, Office of Basic Energy Sciences
Office of Science, U.S. Department of Energy
NSLS/CFN Users MeetingBrookhaven National Laboratory
May 25, 2010
2
What’s New
I. Strategic Planning
II. Program Update NSLS-II LCLS Commissioning EFRCs and SISGR
III. FY 2011 Budget Request Materials Discovery and Design
BESAC & BES Strategic Planning Activities
3
Science for National Needs
Science for Discovery
Systems
Complex
April 2010
Panel 1: Solar ElectricityCoordinator: Charles Gay, Applied Solar
• Fundamentals of Materials and Interfaces in Photovoltaics• Advanced Photovoltaic Analysis and Computational
Modeling for Up-scaling• Photovoltaic Lifetime and Degradation Science
Panel 2: Advanced Nuclear EnergyCoordinator: Kurt Edsinger, EPRI
• Materials Degradation Mechanisms • Advanced Irradiation Effects Scaling • Back End of the Fuel Cycle
Panel 3: Carbon SequestrationCoordinator: Richard Esposito, Southern Co.
• Extraction of High Resolution Information from Subsurface Imaging and Modeling
• Understanding Multi-scale Dynamics of Flow and Plume Migration
• Understanding Millennium Timescale Processes from Short Timescale Experimentation
Panel 4: Electricity StorageCoordinator: Bart Riley, A123 Systems
• Identification and Development of New Materials • Invention of New Architectures for Energy Storage • Understanding and Controlling Heterogeneous Interfaces • Identification and Development of New Tools
SciTech Priority Research Directions
Panel 5: Electric Power Grid TechnologiesCoordinator: Thomas Schneider, NREL
• Power Electronic Materials • High Power Superconductors • Electric Insulating and Dielectric Materials • Electrical Conductors
Panel 6: Advanced Solid State LightingCoordinator: Bernd Keller, Cree
• White Light Emission Through Wavelength Conversion • High Efficiency Emission at High Current Density and
Temperature • Organic Light Emitting Diode Materials and Structures
Panel 7: BiofuelsCoordinator: Gregory Powers, Verenium
• Diversity of Biomass and Its Intermediates in the Manufacture of Biofuels
• Mass Transport Phenomena in Conversion of Biomass to Biofuels
• Biomass Catalyst Discovery, Characterization and PerformancePanel 8: Efficient Energy Generation and UseCoordinator: Om Nalamasu, Applied Materials
• Enabling Materials Technologies for Renewable Power • Fuel Cell Materials Understanding and Discovery • Dynamic Optical and Thermal Properties of Building Envelopes
Panel 9: Scientific User FacilitiesCoordinator: Simon Bare, UOP
• At-Scale Experiments on Commercial Materials/Devices • Development of New Materials• Study of Interfaces and Interfacial Phenomena
BESAC & BES Strategic Planning Activities
5
Science for National Needs
Science for Discovery
National Scientific User Facilities, the 21st century tools of science
Systems
Complex
BES Scientific Users Facilities
7
Two science drivers for new light sources are identified which combine the deepest science impact with the broadest user base:
• Femtosecond time resolution – opens completely new territory where atoms can be followed in real time and electronic excitations can be resolved down to their intrinsic time scale.
• Sub-nanometer spatial resolution –opens the length scale where quantum confinement dominates electronic behavior and where catalytic activity begins. Spectroscopy of individual nanometer-scale objects rather than conglomerates will eliminate blurring of the energy levels induced by the size and shape distribution and thereby reveal active sites in catalysis and the traps where electrons are lost in photovoltaics.
Science Drivers for Next Generation Photon Sources
May 2009
8
Accelerator Physics for Future Light Sources
Evaluate the state of readiness of machine architectures to building the next major X-ray science user facilityWhat will be ready in 5 years? In 10 years?
Provide peer-reviewable scientific manuscripts describingPotential of approach (not wavelength specific)Physics & technological challengesTechnical readiness of light source architectures
Describe research steps & directions toward a new generation of photon sources
Smaller-scale architectures were considered for context and long term potential
Five reports will be published in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A:
Free Electron Lasers Energy Recovered Linacs Ultimate Storage Ring
Cathode R&D for Future Light Sources New Source Technologies &Their Impact On
Future Light Sources
• $150 million in Recovery Act funding to accelerate construction – all funds obligated
• Will Accelerate creation of more than 200 local jobs on Long Island in FY 2009
• Additional jobs saved or created through procurements• Overall project:
– 1,000 jobs– 40,000 cubic yards of concrete– 2,500 tons of steel– 400,000 square feet of space
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Funding 9
National Synchrotron Light Source - IIGround Breaking Ceremony, June 15, 2009
National Synchrotron Light Source – II
10
NSLS
CFN
LinacBooster
JPSI
LOB LOB
LOB
LOBStorage Ring
LOB
0 100 200
400 FEET
MER
MERMER
MER
MER
17:00 PM May 21, 2010
undulator hallx-ray production
near hall3 experiments
far hall3 experiments
electron beam
x-ray beam
Linac Coherent Light Source or “LCLS” at SLACthe world’s first x-ray laser
LCLS uses only 1/3 of linac
Detection of X-ray at Far Hall ~ 1 PM PDT 4/22/2010
Core ResearchSupport single investigator and small group projects to pursue their specific research interests largely in disciplinary sciences.
Energy Frontier Research Centers$2-5 million-per-year multi-disciplinary research centers, established in 2009, focused on addressing fundamental roadblocks related to energy
Energy Innovation Hubs$25 million-per-year research centers (with $10M one-time start-up funds), to be established in 2010, will focus on integrating basic & applied research with technology development to enable transformational energy applications
incr
easi
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rogr
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f sc
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f ef
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BES Research ― Science for Discovery & National NeedsThree Major Types of Research Thrusts
EFRC awards provide the recipients with $2-5 million/year over a five-year award period to pursue collaborative basic research that addresses both energy challenges and science grand challenges in areas including:
Solar Energy Utilization Geosciences for Waste and CO2 Storage Combustion Bio-Fuels Advanced Nuclear Energy Systems Superconductivity Catalysis Materials Under Extreme Environments Solid State Lighting Energy Storage Hydrogen
Energy Frontier Research CentersTackling Our Energy Challenges in a New Era of Science
As stated in the Funding Opportunity Announcement for the EFRCs:“… the research proposed in the EFRC application must:1) address one or more of the challenges described in the
BESAC report Directing Matter and Energy: Five Challenges for Science and the Imagination (http://www.sc.doe.gov/bes/reports/files/GC_rpt.pdf) and
2) address one or more of the energy challenges described in the 10 BES workshop reports in the Basic Research Needs series (http://www.sc.doe.gov/bes/reports/list.html).
FY 2009 EFRCs Funding:
Omnibus Appropriations
Recovery Act (Stimulus Bill)
$277M $100M
Total EFRCs = $777M over 5 years
SC/BES Energy Frontier Research Centers46 EFRCs were launched in late FY 2009 using FY 2009 Appropriations and Recovery Act Funds
14Office of Science FY 2011 Budget14
46 centers awarded, representing 103 participating institutions in 36 states plus D.C
12DOE Labs
31Universities
21
Industry/Nonprofit
By Lead Institution
EnergySupply
EnergyEfficiency
Energy Storage
Crosscutting Sciences
20
14
66
By Topical Category
Energy Frontier Research Center Locations ( Leads; Participants)
15
Grand challenge science: ultrafast science; chemical imaging, complex & emergent behavior Use inspired discovery science: research areas identified in BESAC and BES workshop reports Tools for 21st century science: midscale instrumentation
A total of $55M was awarded in FY 2009: single investigator awards ($150 – 300K/yr), small group awards ($500 – 1500K/yr) for up to three years, and mid-scale instrument (up to $2M).
Single-Investigator & Small-Group Research
95 projects were awarded:• 72 university awards• 23 lab awards
Grand challenge science: 22%Use-inspired discovery science: 47%Mid-scale tools: 33%
(28)
(10 )
(57)
Additional accelerator and detector R&D awards.
16
Research programs Energy Innovation Hubs Energy Frontier Research Centers Core research increases for grand
challenge science, use-inspired science, accelerator & detector research
Topical areas include: basic research in ultrafast science, materials synthesis, carbon capture, radiation resistant materials, separation sciences, advanced combustion modeling for engine design, geophysics and geochemistry on CO2/minerals & rocks interactions, and gas hydrates
Scientific user facilities operations Synchrotron light sources Neutron scattering facilities Nanoscale Science Research Centers
FY 2011 BES Budget Request
Facilities
Ops777.3
MSE Research
309.4
CSGB Research
306Light
Sources403.6
Neutron Sources
262.7
NSRC 109.5
Hub 58.3
EFRC140
SBIR & GPP 40.2
MIE 22.4SUF Research27.3
Construction& OPC
153.1
Construction and instrumentation National Synchrotron Light Source-II Spallation Neutron Source instruments SNS Power Upgrade
FY 2011 Request:$ 1,835M
New BES Research Investments Address Critical Needs An FY 2011 BES call will cover a broad range of research awards including new EFRCs
17
About $66 million will be competed in the BES Program to support additional Energy Frontier Research Centers, single investigators and small group awards in the following areas: 1. Discovery and development of new materials
The FY 2011 solicitation will emphasize new synthesis capabilities, including bio-inspired approaches, for science-driven materials discovery and synthesis. Research will include crystalline materials, which have broad technology applications and enable the exploration of novel states of matter.
2. Research for energy applicationsThe FY 2011 solicitation will emphasize fundamental science related to:
Carbon capture, including the rational design of novel materials and separation processes for post-combustion CO2 capture in existing power plants and catalysis and separation research for novel carbon capture schemes to aid the design of future power plants.
Advanced nuclear energy systems including radiation resistant materials in fission and fusion applications and separation science and heavy element chemistry for fuel cycles.
Awards will be competitively solicited via Funding Opportunity Announcements following the FY 2011 appropriation.
New Materials Discovery – Enabler of Technology Innovations
18
Numerous recent Nobel prizes- quantum Hall effect and fractional quantum Hall effect (Physics 1985, 1998), buckyballs (Chemistry 1996), and conducting polymers (Chemistry 2000) – were made possible by new materials.
The material discoveries have also enabled generations of technology breakthroughs, from integrated circuits, lasers, optoelectronic communications, to solid-state lighting. Virtually, further advances in these technologies have been limited by the performance of materials.
Understanding and controlling the hierarchical assembly of fundamental building blocks (atoms, molecules, clusters, and colloids etc.) in ways to synthesize materials with “designer” properties defines a grand challenge for materials research, i.e. shifting the paradigm of materials discovery from serendipity to rational design.
Flexible, plastic solar cell
Negative Index Materials
Discovery and Development of New MaterialsTo expand scientific frontiers and drive technology innovation
19
The new BES activity will provide:Research on crystalline materials, including bioinspired approaches, which have broad technology applications and enable the exploration of novel states of matter. Establish new synthesis capabilities for materials discovery and synthesis Crystalline materials by “reverse design”– expanding the use of theoretical tools in materials
design Atom-by-atom design – manipulation of effective dimensionality and connectivity which manifest in
novel behavior and properties Exploiting biological strategies and approaches to materials synthesis and assembly
Develop new synthesis capabilities and a strong foundation for science-driven materials discovery
Build U.S. leadership in materials synthesis and discovery enterprise to drive technology innovation
1mm
Directing Matter and Energy: 2007 BESAC Report
Five Grand Challenges
How do we control materials properties at the level of electrons?
How do we design and perfect atom- and energy-efficient synthesis of revolutionary new forms of matter with tailored properties?
How do remarkable properties of matter emerge from complex correlations of the atomic and electronic constituents and how can we control these properties?
How can we master energy and information on the nanoscale to create new technologies with capabilities rivaling those of living systems?
How do we characterize and control matter--especially very far away--from equilibrium?
Creation of New Materials ─ An Essential Component of Science Grand Challenges
20
Crystalline Matter: 2009 NRC Report
Three Grand Challenges – Novel Properties from Next Generation Crystalline Materials
Manipulation of effective dimensionality and connectivity of crystal substructures to manifest in novel behavior and properties
– Crystalline Materials for Energy Production and ConversionBand gap engineering for solar energy conversion, solid state lighting, new superconductors for electricity delivery, catalysts for fuels, new crystalline materials for energy conversion and storage
– Crystalline Materials by DesignAdvances in experimental and theoretical tools will make possible the ability to design materials for specific technological purposes
21
Inspired by Biology: 2008 NRC Report
Dynamically adaptive and far-from-equilibrium materials
Self-repairing materials Effective and unique strategies for interfacing
biological and non-biological materials for emergent behavior
Synthetic enzymes Material architectures for efficiently integrating light-
harvesting, photo-redox, and catalytic functions Materials that take inspiration from biological gates,
pores, channels, and motors
Biology can be a source and inspiration to new materials synthesis under mild conditions and novel assembly strategies
22
EFRCs – Larger centers to broadly address materials discovery and crystals growth Provide infrastructure for cutting-edge materials discovery and development
larger-scale facilities, specialized staff, specialized infrastructure for safely performing processes involving toxic chemicals
capabilities based upon multidisciplinary teams “Thematic” focus to tackle the most significant synthesis challenges related to energy
research
Single PIs/Small Groups – Unique education and training needed for new materials synthesis and discovery High risk, niche research areas
Together, EFRCs and individual PI activities will result in a network for materials discovery across the Nation Strong foundation for a culture of science-driven synthesis Will provide the scientific and technological impact to return leadership of this crucial field
to the U.S.
Synthesis Science and Discovery: Implementation
23
BES ES&H Policy Guideline
Conducting All BES-supported Activities in a Safe and Environmentally Conscientious Manner
The Office of Basic Energy Sciences (BES) is committed to conducting research and executing projects in a manner that ensures protection of the workers, the public, and the environment. Protecting the workers, the public, and the environment is a direct and individual responsibility of all BES managers and BES-supported researchers and their staff. Funds provided by BES for research and projects will be applied as necessary to ensure that all BES research activities are conducted safely and in an environmentally conscientious manner. Only research and projects conducted in this way will be supported.