Xing Xie

Xing Xie
xing.xie@ce.gatech.edu
CEE Profile Page

 Xing Xie is the Carlton S. Wilder Assistant Professor in the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology. Prior to joining Georgia Tech, he was a post-doctoral scholar at California Institute of Technology. He received his B.S. (2006) and M.S. (2008) degrees in Environmental Science & Engineering from Tsinghua University, and a second M.S. degree (2012) in Materials Science & Engineering and a Ph.D. degree (2014) in Civil & Environmental Engineering from Stanford University. His research focuses on the applications of innovative materials for sustainable and reliable water and energy. He has worked on many projects related to water treatment and reuse, microbial detection and quantification, energy and resource recovery, energy storage, etc. He has published more than 60 peer-reviewed articles with more than 6,000 citations

Carlton S. Wilder Junior Professor, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Assistant Professor, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Phone
404.894.9723
Office
ES&T 3236
Additional Research

Water & wastewater treatment; Energy & resources recovery; Energy storage; Salinity energy & desalination; self-sustained sanitation; Oil-water separation; Environmental monitoring

Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=XiHhfOkAAAAJ&hl=en
LinkedIn Personal Research Site
Xing
Xie
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A.P. "Sakis" Meliopoulos

A.P. "Sakis" Meliopoulos
sakis.m@gatech.edu
Website

A.P. "Sakis" Meliopoulos, Ph.D., is the Georgia Power Distinguished Professor in the School of Electrical & Computer Engineering at Georgia Tech and serves as Associate Director of Cyber-Physical Systems for the Institute for Information Security & Privacy. Meliopoulos helped the development of the power program at Georgia Tech by contributing to the modernization of existing courses, introducing new courses, initiating research activities, and developing continuing education programs and the Power System Certificate program. Meliopoulos is the co-inventor, with George Cokkinides, of the Smart Ground Multimeter and the Macrodyne PMU-based Harmonic Measurement System for transmission networks. In his most recent research activities, he has introduced new approaches for modeling large scale power grids based on quadratization and the utilization of this approach to a variety of protection and control of the future power system integrated with distributed generation, renewable energy sources, and power electronic subsystems and interfaces. He has introduced the concept of the SuperCalibrator, a new approach that enables fully distributed state estimation and root cause disturbance analysis. This technology is expected to make a huge impact on the way we presently monitor and control the power grid. Presently, Meliopoulos leads four field demonstration projects on four different utilities: USVI-WAPA, NYPA, Southern Company, and PG&E. He has applied the quadratized approach for high fidelity analysis, stability and control of integrated systems consisting of the power grid, and power electronics interfaced distributed generation and renewables (the μGRID model). He is leading an EPRI-sponsored effort to develop "settingless" protection methods utilizing recent technologies of merging units and GPS-synchronized measurements. He has developed a state-of-the-art synchrophasor laboratory with multiple capabilities: (a) characterization of PMUs, (b) testing of PDCs, (c) autonomous monitoring and control using GPS-synchronized measurements, and (d) testing of protective functions that require GPS synchronization. Meliopoulos holds three patents, published three books, and published over 270 technical papers. For his research achievements, he was elected Fellow of the IEEE in 1993. In addition, he has received the IEEE-IAS Society Field Award in 2005 (IEEE-IAS Richard Kaufman Award), and the 2010 George Montefiore Institute Award (Belgium). He was named the Georgia Power Distinguished Professor in 2006. He serves as the site director for the NSF I/URC PSERC, he is the academic administrator of the Power System Certificate program, and the chairman of the Georgia Tech Protective Relaying Conference and the Fault and Disturbance Analysis Conference. He attended the National Technical University of Athens, Greece, where he earned the Diploma in Electrical and Mechanical Engineering in 1972. He then attended Georgia Tech where he earned his MSEE (1974) and Ph.D. (1976) degrees. He joined Georgia Tech's faculty of Electrical Engineering in 1976.

Georgia Power Distinguished Professor, School of Electrical & Computer Engineering
Associate Director, Cyber-Physical Systems
Phone
404.894.2926
Office
VL E164
Additional Research

Large-Scale or Distributed Systems

A.P. "Sakis"
Meliopoulos
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Alan Doolittle

Alan Doolittle
alan.doolittle@ece.gatech.edu
ECE Profile

Professor Doolittle is a native of Jonesboro, Georgia. He graduated from Georgia Tech with a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering with highest honors in 1989. He later received his Ph.D. in electrical engineering in 1996 from Georgia Tech. 

His thesis work revolved around identifying the device limiting defects in photovoltaic silicon materials using several custom designed and patented tools. He later worked as a Research Engineer II in the area of compound semiconductor growth with emphasis on wide bandgap semiconductors. He joined the Georgia Tech faculty in 2001. 

During his time at Georgia Tech he has helped develop academic programs in the areas of microelectronic fabrication, materials growth, characterization, and measurement system design. Professor Doolittle consults with industry in the areas of law, materials testing, MBE growth, and test equipment development. 
His hobbies include bible studies, classic cars, playing the guitar, and reading. Most of his free time is spent with his two teenage children.

Professor, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Phone
(404) 894-9884
Additional Research

Electrical Grid; Energy Storage

Website
Alan
Doolittle
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W. Jud Ready

Jud Ready
jud.ready@gtri.gatech.edu
MSE Profile Page

W. Jud Ready is the executive director of the Space Research Institute. Prior to this role, he served as associate director of external engagement for the Georgia Tech Institute for Matter and Systems and director of the Georgia Tech Center for Space Technology and Research. He has also been an adjunct professor in the School of Materials Science and Engineering at Georgia Tech and a principal research engineer on the research faculty of Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) for over a dozen years. Prior to joining the Georgia Tech faculty, he worked for a major military contractor (General Dynamics) as well as in small business (MicroCoating Technologies). He has served as PI or co-PI for grants totaling ~$17M awarded by the Army, Navy, Air Force, DARPA, NASA, NSF, NIST, industry, charitable foundations and the States of Georgia and Florida. His current research focuses primarily on energy, aerospace, nanomaterial applications, and electronics reliability.

Executive Director, Space Research Institute
Principal Research Engineer, Georgia Tech Research Institute
Phone
404.407.6036
Additional Research

Materials Failure and Reliability; Carbon Nanotubes; Integrated photonics; Photovoltaics; Solar

GTRI
Geogia Tech Research Institute > Electro-Optical Systems Laboratory
Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=Hf8dRC4AAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate
W. Jud
Ready
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Thomas Habetler

Thomas Habetler
tom.habetler@ece.gatech.edu
Website
Professor, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Phone
(404) 894-9829
Additional Research

Electrical Grid; Electronics

Thomas
Habetler
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Akanksha Menon

Akanksha Menon
akanksha.menon@me.gatech.edu
Akanksha Menon Profile

Dr. Akanksha Menon is an Assistant Professor in the Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering at Georgia Tech. Prior to this, she was a Rosenfeld Postdoctoral Fellow at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, where she performed research on hybrid membrane-thermal desalination processes using solar energy, and she also contributed to the development of thermal energy storage materials. Dr. Menon completed her Ph.D. at Georgia Tech, where she focused on developing semiconducting polymers and new device architectures for thermoelectric energy harvesting. She holds a bachelor's degree from Texas A&M University at Qatar, as well as a master’s degree in Mechanical Engineering from Georgia Tech.

Her research group at Georgia Tech is working on technologies for the water-energy nexus.

Assistant Professor, Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering
Research Focus Areas
Akanksha
Menon
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Lauren Garten

Lauren Garten
lauren.garten@mse.gatech.edu

Lauren Garten joined the School of Materials Science and Engineering as an assistant professor in Fall 2021. Her group focuses on developing new materials for energy and electronic applications, particularly at the nexus between ferroelectricity, ferromagnetism, electronics, and photovoltaics. 

Lauren received her B.S. in ceramic engineering from the Missouri University of Science and Technology. She then went on to earn a Ph.D. in material science from the Pennsylvania State University for her work on ferroelectric, piezoelectric, and dielectric synthesis and characterization with Prof. Susan Trolier-McKinstry. She then became a post-doc at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory working on metastable materials for energy applications. After a very short stint as a material scientist at Sandia National Laboratory, she won the NRC Research Associateship from the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Math which was hosted at the U.S. Naval Research Lab (NRL). She then received the Jerome and Isabella Karle Distinguished Scholar Fellowship from NRL to work on lead-free multiferroic materials and devices.

Assistant Professor, School of Materials Science and Engineering
Phone
404-894-5748
Office
Pettit 210
Additional Research

Electronics, Energy Harvesting, Energy Storage, Solar

University, College, and School/Department
Departmental Bio
Lauren
Garten
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Natalie Stingelin

Natalie  Stingelin
natalie.stingelin@mse.gatech.edu
ChBE Profile Page

Previously a professor of organic functional materials at the Department of Materials, Imperial College of London, Natalie Stingelin joined Georgia Tech in 2016. She focuses her research on the broad field of organic functional materials, including organic electronics; multifunctional inorganic/organic hybrids; smart, advanced optical systems based on organic matter; and bioelectronics. Associate Editor of the Journal of Materials Chemistry, she has published more than 130 papers and 6 issued patents. She is a co-investigator of the newly established EPSRC Centre for Innovative Manufacturing in Large Area Electronics, and she leads the EC Marie-Curie Training Network 'INFORM' that involves 11 European partners. She was awarded the Institute of Materials, Minerals & Mining's Rosenhain Medal and Prize (2014) and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) President's International Fellowship Initiative (PIFI) Award for Visiting Scientists (2015).

Professor, School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Phone
404.894.5192
Office
ES&T L1220
Additional Research

Organic electronics; Bioelectronics

Research Focus Areas
University, College, and School/Department
Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=ZILIcOwAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate
Stingelin Lab
Natalie
Stingelin
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