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    Energy Technologies Area (ETA) researchers are continually building on the strong scientific foundation we have developed over the past 50 years. We address the world’s most pressing scientific challenges across the buildings, transportation, and industrial sectors. ETA is at the forefront of developing better batteries for electric vehicles; improving the country's aging electrical grid and innovating distributed energy and storage solutions; developing grid-interactive, efficient buildings; and providing the most comprehensive market and data analysis worldwide.

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    The Energy Technologies Area (ETA) is unique in translating fundamental scientific discoveries into scalable technology adoption. Our approach combines an understanding of the marketplace and the role of state and federal regulation and policies. ETA's research drives real-world, practical results that affect and improve the everyday lives of Americans and those across the globe. Saving energy and increasing resilience are key to the foundation of our research, which is driven by technoeconomic analysis and in-lab experimentation and discovery.

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Publications

Publications by Research Area

Buildings
Demand Response
Electricity Markets & Policy
Energy Efficiency
Energy Storage
Industrial Energy Analysis
Renewable Energy
Sustainable Energy & Environmental Systems
Transportation

Publications by Division

Building Technology (BTUS)
Energy Analysis (EAEI)
Energy Storage (ESDR)
X Author: Ulrike S Vogl

2015

Vogl, Ulrike S, Simon F Lux, Prodip K Das, Adam Z Weber, Tobias Placke, Robert Kostecki, and Martin Winter."The Mechanism of SEI Formation on Single Crystal Si(100), Si(110) and Si(111) Electrodes."Journal of The Electrochemical Society 162.12 (2015) A2281 - A2288. DOI
Vogl, Ulrike S, Simon F Lux, Ethan J Crumlin, Zhi Liu, Lydia Terborg, Martin Winter, and Robert Kostecki."The Mechanism of SEI Formation on a Single Crystal Si(100) Electrode."Journal of The Electrochemical Society 162.4 (2015) A603-A607. DOI

2014

Vogl, Ulrike S, Prodip K Das, Adam Z Weber, Martin Winter, Robert Kostecki, and Simon F Lux."The mechanism of interactions between CMC binder and Si single crystal facets."Langmuir (2014). DOI
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