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ORNL honors 2025 Director’s Award winners

Winners of the 2025 UT-Battelle Director’s Awards advance quantum materials, strengthen cybersecurity, and exemplify leadership and collaboration

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From energy to AI, quantum to manufacturing — the hands of ORNL are solving the world’s toughest challenges and shaping America’s future. Credit: ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy

 

UT-Battelle, which manages Oak Ridge National Laboratory for the Department of Energy, celebrated exceptional achievements in science, operations and community engagement during its annual Awards Night on Saturday in Lenoir City. 

The annual event highlights individuals and teams at Oak Ridge National Laboratory whose work advances the nation’s scientific and technological leadership, exemplifies operational excellence, and reflects UT-Battelle’s commitment to the community. The ceremony concludes with presentation of the Director’s Awards, selected by the laboratory director from among the evening’s 24 award recipients. 

“This year’s Director’s Award recipients represent the very best of ORNL,” ORNL Director Stephen Streiffer said. “Each awardee exemplifies a dedication to the lab’s important mission and a commitment to our core value of impact. Their achievements are accelerating scientific innovation, strengthening national security and enhancing operational excellence."

A man in a blue suit and red tie standing against a blue marbled backdrop, smiling in a formal portrait.
Brenden Ortiz. Credit: ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy

Brenden Ortiz, a Wigner Distinguished Staff Fellow in ORNL’s Physical Sciences Directorate, received the Director’s Award for Outstanding Individual Accomplishment in Science & Technology for pioneering discoveries in kagome metals that revealed new insights into charge density waves and magnetism. His research — reflected in 16 high-impact publications, DOE highlights and collaborations across institutions — advances quantum materials science and exemplifies exceptional early-career leadership at the lab.

The Polyglot Detection Team received the Director’s Award for Outstanding Team Accomplishment for developing Polyvore, an AI-based suite of tools that detect and disarm polyglot files — a particularly malicious form of malware capable of masquerading as multiple file types and evading even the most advanced machine learning-based detection tools. By transferring this technology to government and commercial partners, the team helped to close critical gaps in malware detection and strengthen national cybersecurity through ORNL’s applied cyber science leadership. Team members are Timothy Oesch, Luke Koch, Amul Chaulagain, Brian Weber, Matthew Dixson and Michael Huettel of the lab’s National Security Sciences Directorate.

Four men in business suits standing side by side against a blue textured background, posing for a formal professional photo.
From left, Matthew Dixson, Amul Chaulagain, Timothy Oesch and Luke Koch. Team members not pictured include Brian Weber and Michael Huettel. Credit: ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy

The Director’s Award for Outstanding Team Accomplishment recognized the ORNL ERP S/4HANA Upgrade team for completing a two-year, cross-directorate effort to modernize the laboratory’s enterprise business systems. The on-time, under-budget transition to the SAP S/4HANA platform involved 178 staff and improved critical functions such as finance, procurement and human resources, positioning ORNL for long-term agility, performance and innovation in support of the DOE mission. Team members include Tracey Lawson, Justin Ferrell and Janet Maddern of the Business Services Directorate; Kimberly Smithson, Hannah Greise, William Matthews, Bryan McDaniel, Dionne Harper, Justin Rogers and Megan Bradley of the Information Technology Services Directorate; Janie Phillips of the Human Resources Directorate; and Patricia Winter of the Isotope Science and Enrichment Directorate.

A group of eight professionally dressed individuals standing together against a blue marbled backdrop, smiling and posing for a formal group portrait.
From left, Billy (William) Matthews, Janie Phillips, Dionne Harper, Tracey Lawson, Hannah Greise, Kimberly Smithson, Megan Bradley and Justin Ferrell. Not pictured is Bryan McDaniel, Justin Rogers, Patricia Winter and Janet Maddern. Credit: ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy

Awards Night provided a special opportunity to celebrate the outstanding contributions of ORNL’s staff, highlighting the laboratory’s significant impact on Tennessee and the nation. These awards serve as a reminder of ORNL’s vital role in advancing scientific discovery and addressing some of the country’s most pressing challenges.

UT-Battelle manages ORNL for DOE’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.