
The Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the Tennessee Valley Authority and the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development were recognized by the Federal Laboratory Consortium, or FLC, for their efforts to develop Tennessee as a national leader in fusion energy.
The annual FLC awards recognize significant accomplishments in transferring federal laboratory technologies to the marketplace and are among the most prestigious in the technology transfer industry.
2025 Technology Transfer Innovation Award, “Empowering Researchers, Engaging Entrepreneurs: ORNL’s Safari Program Drives Innovation”, recognizes the ORNL Safari Program. The Partnerships Office worked in collaboration with Angelique Adams Media Solutions to develop and deliver an eight-week coaching workshop to equip researchers with the skills to effectively communicate and market their technologies.
Safari was funded by the DOE Office of Technology Transitions’ Practices to Accelerate the Commercialization of Technology program, which assists national laboratories in developing new pathways that increase technology commercialization.
ORNL honorees include Jennifer Caldwell, technology transfer director, and Susan Ochs, engagements program manager. Caldwell and Ochs share this award with Angelique Adams, owner of Angelique Adams Media Solutions.
2025 Excellence in Technology Transfer Award, “Next-Generation Fuels Take Flight with Novel Catalyst,” recognizes Gevo, a leader in advanced biofuels, that partnered with ORNL to mature a more efficient, affordable, process to develop synthetic aviation fuel.
ORNL honorees include Jennifer Caldwell, technology transfer director; Andrew “Andy” Sutton, group leader and senior scientist; Timothy Theiss, former program manager; Edna Gergel, patent agent; and Andrea Bowers, strategic partnerships agreements specialist. This award is shared with Andrew J. Ingram, process chemistry and catalysis director of Gevo. The research behind this project was supported by DOE’s Bioenergy Technologies Office.

2025 Excellence in Technology Transfer Award, “Transforming Construction with Self-Healing Barrier Film for Vacuum Insulation,” honors Flexcon, a company that licensed ORNL technology designed to make buildings more energy efficient, thanks to a self-healing barrier film that can be incorporated into vacuum insulation panels. This technology showcases ORNL’s cross-cutting areas of excellence, as it was developed in collaboration by researchers from both the basic and applied science areas of the lab.
The experts at the Building Technologies Research and Integration Center, a DOE user facility at ORNL, provided support for the work. This project was developed through a cooperative research and development agreement sponsored by DOE’s Building Technologies Office as part of a 2020 Technology Commercialization Fund award.
ORNL honorees include Tomonori Saito, distinguished R&D staff; Andreana Leskovjan, senior commercialization manager; Andrea Bowers, strategic partnerships agreements specialist; and Diana Hun, group leader. This award is shared with the University of Tennessee’s Natasha Ghezawi, graduate student researcher, and Michael Merwin, director of new technology at Flexcon.
2025 FLC Interagency Partnership FLC Award for ATOM, or Accelerating Therapeutics for Opportunities in Medicine, is an award shared with DOE National Laboratories Argonne National Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory and Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research, which is sponsored by the National Cancer Institute.
ORNL joined the ATOM consortium in 2021 to support its mission in transforming drug discovery from a slow, sequential and high-risk process into a rapid, integrated and patient-centric model.
The lab pledged to further ATOM’s AI-driven, drug discovery platform with ORNL’s expertise.
Since the FLC’s founding in 1986, ORNL has won a total of 87 awards.
UT-Battelle manages ORNL for the Department of Energy’s Office of Science, the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. The Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit energy.gov/science. – Brynn Downing