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Richard Douglas Robinson

Associate Professor

Department of Materials Science and Engineering

Richard Douglas Robinson
Richard Douglas Robinson
Graduate Field Affiliations
Applied Physics
Chemical Engineering
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Materials Science and Engineering
Sustainable Energy (minor)

Biography

Professor Robinson’s research focuses on nanostructured materials for alternative energy applications. Our goal is to utilize the advanced properties of nanomaterials to build efficient thermoelectrics and fuel cells. By altering the size, shape, and composition of our particles we are able to tune properties important to these applications such as their band gap and thermal conductivity. Additionally our conducting metal oxide nanomaterials can be used in a variety of other energy applications where charge transport is important.

Research Interests

Research Projects -Colloidal synthesis of nanoparticle metal oxides -Doping of nanoparticles to control electronic and thermal properties -Synthesis of new organometallic precursors for nanoparticles -In situ studies of particle nucleation and growth -Nanofabrication of monochromatic phonon source

Much of our synthetic work revolves around colloidal synthesis of nanoparticles, relying on solvothermal, air-free techniques. We use a variety of organometallic precursors and surfactant groups to control nanoparticle composition and growth rate, with the ultimate goal of structuring efficient materials specifically for thermoelectric and fuel cell applications. The particles are assembled into macro-sized materials through a variety of means en route to producing devices. To enhance our understanding of thermoelectrics we are studying the heat transport, carrier confinement, phonon boundary scattering, and thermoelectric properties in low-dimensional materials. We’re developing a monochromatic phonon source and a phonon spectrometer to accomplish this. Other fundamental research areas include the study of nanoparticle growth and nucleation, ion intercalation, and surface ligand chemistry.

  • Advanced Materials
  • Energy Systems
  • Nanotechnology
  • Advanced Materials Processing
  • Materials Synthesis and Processing

Select Publications

Select Awards and Honors

  • Fulbright Scholar 2015
  • Cornell Engineering Research Excellence Award 2015
  • Non-Tenured Faculty Award, 3M 2012
  • NSF Career Award, National Science Foundation 2012
  • R&D 100 Award, Nanocrystal Solar Cells 2009

Education

  • B.S., Mechanical Engineering, Tufts University
  • M.S., Mechanical Engineering, Tufts University
  • Ph.D., Applied Physics, Columbia University 2004