Biomaterials research earns engineering professor $340,000 USDA grant

Bin Li, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at 麻豆破解版 State University, has been awarded a $340,000, three-year grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture鈥檚 National Institute of Food and Agriculture. The grant will fund Li鈥檚 research into the use of nanotechnology to create green energy materials from biomass.

The project title is 鈥淓ngineering Plant Proteins to Achieve Dielectric Materials with High Energy Density and High Energy Efficiency.鈥

Transforming renewable and low-cost biomass into functional materials has been a promising solution to serious social and economic issues caused by the production, use and disposal of materials made from fossil fuels.

The proposed research aims at exploring and extending the applications of renewable and abundant natural resources, such as plant proteins, for energy storage applications involving nanotechnology. In addition to being renewable and abundant in nature, biomass possesses unique chemical and physical structures with great potential in non-food functional applications.

鈥淭he success of this research will build a firm foundation for biomass-based sustainable energy materials, providing solutions for growing global concerns over high energy consumption and energy waste, and will ultimately contribute to our agricultural economy and ecosystem,鈥 Li said.