Specific achievements not detailed, but significant contributions to the field of material science are implied.
Research Experience
Leads the Dynamic Characterization Group; Research areas include energy materials, biomedical systems, and functional and structural materials for aerospace, nuclear, quantum, and power applications.
Education
No specific details provided
Background
Professor Mitra Taheri's research group, the Dynamic Characterization Group (DCG), develops and utilizes operando/in situ techniques and evolving autonomous platforms to 'see the unseen.' They use microscopy, artificial intelligence and machine learning, and synthesis/processing tools to probe structural, functional, and biological materials in extreme environments, harnessing non-equilibrium phenomena from the atomic to bulk scale. In other words, they make and break things, and watch it all happen in real time!! This leads them to new discovery and understanding of energy-producing materials, biological and medical systems, and functional and structural materials for aerospace, nuclear, quantum, and power applications.
Miscellany
Affiliations: Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering; Materials Characterization and Processing; Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Hopkins Extreme Materials Institute; Ralph O’Connor Sustainable Energy Institute.