For environmental-effects research related to energy technologies and their use, focusing on the impacts of climate and atmospheric changes on the physiology, growth, and biogeochemical cycles of North American forest ecosystems.
Filter Corporate Fellows
Corporate Fellow Type
Year
- (-) 2012 (2)
- (-) 2008 (3)
- (-) 1986 (2)
- (-) 1979 (5)
- 2023 (4)
- 2022 (3)
- 2021 (3)
- 2020 (5)
- 2017 (2)
- 2016 (3)
- 2015 (3)
- 2014 (2)
- 2013 (3)
- 2011 (2)
- 2010 (1)
- 2009 (2)
- 2007 (2)
- 2006 (2)
- 2005 (3)
- 2004 (2)
- 2003 (3)
- 2002 (3)
- 2001 (2)
- 2000 (1)
- 1999 (3)
- 1998 (2)
- 1997 (3)
- 1996 (3)
- 1995 (3)
- 1994 (2)
- 1992 (2)
- 1991 (1)
- 1990 (3)
- 1989 (1)
- 1988 (4)
- 1987 (2)
- 1985 (3)
- 1983 (2)
- 1976 (3)
All Corporate Fellow summaries reflect the awardee and ORNL at the time the fellowship was awarded.
2012
For pioneering research and development of new materials for advanced energy technologies, including materials for (a) the storage of nuclear waste, (b) the solid-state generation of electrical power directly from heat, and (c) the lossless transport of electricity.
2008
For outstanding scientific, programmatic, and institutional contributions to ORNL in advanced computational structural mechanics and nuclear safety technologies.
For pioneering the application of chaos theory and nonlinear dynamics to energy technologies, including gas-fluidized beds, internal combustion engines, and pulsed combustion.
For pioneering research and distinguished contributions to the field of high-temperature superconductors, including fundamental materials science advances and technical innovations that enable commercialization.
1986
For contributions to advanced control systems for nuclear reactor, including development of control-system and plant protection technologies that permit automated start-up and operation; and to analysis techniques that have led to better understanding of reactor dynamics.
For contributions to understanding plasma turbulence and the nonlinear properties of magnetohydrodynamic instabilities, especially their role in explaining the behavior of magnetically confined plasmas, and for development of new magnetic confinement concepts that overcome these limitations.
1979
For advances in neutron and gamma-ray dosimetry, the transport of electricity through gases, and the development of laser-based one-atom detection with applications in nuclear physics, solar neutrino research, and oceanic, geologic, and environmental research
For research on the processes involved in the induction of mutations, elucidating the roles and sequences of DNA repair and replication in converting radiation or chemical damage into mutations, and for contributions to the understanding of biological control mechanisms at the cellular level
For work at the forefront of neutron scattering research, for early work on the fundamentals of scattering from ferromagnetic materials, and for significant contributions to understanding the complex magnetic structures and properties of elements and compounds such as the heavy rare-earth metals