Professor
Jenny Nelson, FRSProfile page
Professor of Physics
Department of Physics - Faculty of Natural Sciences
- Professor of PhysicsDepartment of Physics - Faculty of Natural Sciences
- 020 7594 7581 (Work)
- 1007, Huxley Building, South Kensington Campus, United Kingdom
RESEARCH
Overview
Jenny Nelson is a Professor of Physics at Imperial College London, where she has researched novel varieties of material for use in solar cells since 1989. Her current research is focussed on understanding the properties of molecular semiconductor materials and their application to organic solar cells. This work combines fundamental electrical, spectroscopic and structural studies of molecular electronic materials with numerical modelling and device studies, with the aim of optimising the performance of solar cells based on molecular and hybrid materials.
Since 2010 she has been working together with the Grantham Institute for Climate Change to explore the mitigation potential of photovoltaic, and other renewable, technologies. She has published over 200 articles in peer reviewed journals, several book chapters and a book on the physics of solar cells. She was awarded the 2009 Institute of Physics Joule Prize and medal and the 2012 Royal Society Armourers and Brasiers Company Prize for her research.
Research areas:
- Multi-scale modelling of molecular electronic materials
- Device physics of organic and hybrid solar cells
- Electronic, spectoscopic and structural characterisation of molecular electronic materials
- Mitigation potential of solar photovoltaic technology
Jenny Nelson is a Professor of Physics at Imperial College London, where she has researched novel varieties of material for use in solar cells since 1989. Her current research is focussed on understanding the properties of molecular semiconductor materials and their application to organic solar cells. This work combines fundamental electrical, spectroscopic and structural studies of molecular electronic materials with numerical modelling and device studies, with the aim of optimising the performance of solar cells based on molecular and hybrid materials.
Since 2010 she has been working together with the Grantham Institute for Climate Change to explore the mitigation potential of photovoltaic, and other renewable, technologies. She has published over 200 articles in peer reviewed journals, several book chapters and a book on the physics of solar cells. She was awarded the 2009 Institute of Physics Joule Prize and medal and the 2012 Royal Society Armourers and Brasiers Company Prize for her research.
Research areas:
- Multi-scale modelling of molecular electronic materials
- Device physics of organic and hybrid solar cells
- Electronic, spectoscopic and structural characterisation of molecular electronic materials
- Mitigation potential of solar photovoltaic technology
GRANTS
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Showing page 1, grants 1 to 4 of 4
- GRANTPB2321 - APP47848 - "Moving IMPACT: Integrated Means to Power Agriculture, Clean Cooking and Transportation"Engineering & Physical Sciences Research Council1 Jan 2025 - 31 Dec 2027EPSRC: PB2321 - APP47848 - "Moving IMPACT: Integrated Means to Power Agriculture, Clean Cooking and Transportation" (2025-2027)
- GRANTImperial CoA EPSRCEngineering & Physical Science Research Council (E1 Aug 2020 - 30 Sep 2021Engineering & Physical Science Research Council (E: Imperial CoA EPSRC (2020-2021)
- GRANTEPSRC Capital Award for Core EquipmentEngineering & Physical Science Research Council (E1 Jan 2020 - 30 Jun 2021Engineering & Physical Science Research Council (E: EPSRC Capital Award for Core Equipment (2020-2021)
- GRANTJoint UK India Clean Energy (JUICE) (EPSRC via Loughborough)Engineering & Physical Science Research Council (E1 Sep 2016 - 31 Mar 2022Engineering & Physical Science Research Council (E: Joint UK India Clean Energy (JUICE) (EPSRC via Loughborough) (2016-2022)