Bailey Awarded NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
Senior Eric Bailey, a member of the University of Maryland’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering (MSE), has been awarded a Graduate Research Fellowship from the National Science Foundation (NSF). Three MSE graduate students, Steven Lacey, Samuel Schwarm and Elizabeth Tennyson, and one MSE undergraduate, Allen Chang, received Honorable Mentions. NSF Graduate Research Fellowships, which are among the most prestigious academic wards in the nation, provide three years of support that may be used over a five-year period. For each year of support, the NSF provides a stipend of $30,000 to the fellow and a cost-of-education allowance of $10,500 to the degree-granting institution. Honorable Mentions are granted to meritorious applicants who do not receive fellowship awards as an acknowledgement of significant national academic achievement. Starting this fall, Bailey’s fellowship will support his graduate studies at the University of Pennsylvania’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering. “I expect to work on polymers or nanocomposites, but with [the NSF graduate research fellowship] I have more flexibility,” he says. “I am very interested in understanding the structure-property relationship and hopefully will have a significant computation and simulation component to my thesis.” After receiving his Ph.D., he would like to explore careers in industry in product development, but hopes to maintain ties with academia. “I enjoy teaching, mentoring and tutoring…so I hope to be a [part-time] lecturer at a university.” Bailey, one of the university’s Merrill Presidential Scholars, is a member of MSE and Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics assistant professor Marina Leite’s Renewable Energy and Advanced Devices (READ) lab, where he works on the characterization and improvement of materials used in solar cells. In 2014, he received a Successful Engineering Education and Development Support (SEEDS) Research Fellowship that funded a study in which he used a new imaging technique developed by the READ Lab to spatially map solar cell parameters such as current density, fill factor, and power conversion efficiency at sub-micron resolution. His is among the first to characterize photovoltaics in this way. Bailey has published the results of a previous SEEDS fellowship under MSE professor Aris Chirstou, which described stress and low cycle fatigue behaviors in a lead-free solder, in the Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Electronics. His research experience also includes positions at the Naval Research Lab and W.L. Gore and Associates. In spring 2015, Bailey received the Department of Materials Science and Engineering Chairman’s Outstanding Senior Award and the A. James Clark School of Engineering Kim Borsavage and Pamela J. Stone Student Award for Outstanding Service. Honorable Mention Recipients Chang and Tennyson, who are also members of Leite’s research group, have collaborated on studies of materials used in solar cells.
April 21, 2015 Prev Next |