Key research themes
1. How can nuclear battery design optimize power density and efficiency for miniature energy sources in MEMS and space applications?
This research area investigates the physical constraints and engineering approaches for nuclear batteries, particularly focusing on overcoming the challenges of miniaturization, power density scaling, and energy conversion efficiency. Such optimization is crucial for enabling long-lived, high-performance power sources suitable for microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) and autonomous space missions, where battery size, lifetime, and efficiency critically impact system viability.
2. What are the advancements in semiconductor and analog front-end electronics for nuclear radiation detection and characterization?
This theme centers on the development of specialized semiconductor-based detectors and analog/digital readout electronics to improve sensitivity, resolution, and operational reliability in nuclear radiation detection, spectroscopy, and imaging. These advancements are vital for nuclear physics experiments, nuclear security applications, and medical imaging technologies where precise charge, timing, and energy measurements of ionizing radiation are required under challenging conditions including radiation backgrounds and high count rates.
3. How are emerging radiation detection techniques and instruments enhancing nuclear nonproliferation, safety, and large-scale nuclear system monitoring?
This research direction explores novel radiation detection instrumentation and analytical methods to improve the identification, characterization, and imaging of special nuclear materials (SNM), as well as non-destructive testing of critical nuclear infrastructure components. Progress in multi-modal particle imaging, active interrogation, and radiation shielding modeling enhances nuclear safeguard capability and maintenance efficiency in nuclear power and fusion environments.