Biography
Nancy Haegel is center director of the Materials Science Center in the Materials, Chemical, and Computational Science Directorate at NREL. Prior to joining NREL in 2014, she was a distinguished professor of physics at the Naval Postgraduate School. Previously, she held faculty positions at Fairfield University and UCLA. Her research interests are in electronic materials and materials physics, imaging of electronic transport, high resistivity semiconductors, characterization of solar cells, and nuclear radiation detectors. She contributed to the development of the infrared detectors on the Spitzer Space Telescope. In addition to the U.S. Department of Energy, her research has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Research Corporation, NASA, the Office of Naval Research, and the Department of Homeland Security.
As a professor, Haegel received the UCLA TRW Excellence in Teaching Award, the Alpha Sigma Nu Teacher of the Year Award at Fairfield University, and the Naval Postgraduate School's Schieffelin Award for Teaching Excellence. She received the 2004 APS Prize to a Faculty Member for Research in an Undergraduate Institution. Haegel was a Humboldt Foundation Scholar, a Fulbright Senior Scholar at Hebrew University, and a Kellogg Foundation Fellow. She is the author of approximately 140 publications. She received her undergraduate degree from the University of Notre Dame and her doctorate in materials science and engineering from the University of California at Berkeley.
All sessions by Nancy M. Haegel
PV at Multi-Terawatt Scale: Today’s Choices, Tomorrow’s Role
09:00 AM
Global installed photovoltaic (PV) capacity will likely reach and exceed 1 TW by the end of 2022. Studies applying increasingly sophisticated modeling from multiple sources predict that PV can and will provide a majority of electricity generation and even total energy contribution in a future sustainable energy economy. In this presentation, we will review recent growth rates and predictions for PV, focusing on both the historical record and future trajectories. We will identify timely choices to be made, particularly in managing sector coupling and supply and demand, that will determine the global need for PV by 2050. Finally, a majority power and energy role for PV will create new opportunities and challenges for performance and reliability, global manufacturing and supply chains, and sustainability and circularity. We will review associated R&D agendas and opportunities and priorities for global collaboration.