Anna Douglas

  • Vanderbilt University

    Meet Our Graduates: Anna Douglas

    While at Vanderbilt, Anna began her studies developing nanostructured materials that can improve the performance of energy storage devices including lithium and sodium ion batteries. Read More

    Jun. 22, 2023

  • Vanderbilt University

    Meet Our Graduates: Anna Douglas

    Anna Douglas earned her Ph.D. in Interdisciplinary Materials Science at Vanderbilt University in 2019.  While at Vanderbilt, Anna began her studies developing nanostructured materials that can improve the performance of energy storage devices including lithium and sodium ion batteries. During her graduate studies, Anna co-invented a novel electrochemical synthesis… Read More

    Jan. 25, 2022

  • New method to fashion cheap, small carbon nanotubes ‘could change the world,’ Pint says

    New method to fashion cheap, small carbon nanotubes ‘could change the world,’ Pint says

    Imagine a box you plug into the wall that cleans your toxic air and pays you cash. That’s essentially what Vanderbilt University researchers produced after discovering the blueprint for turning the carbon dioxide into the most valuable material ever sold – carbon nanotubes with small diameters. Read More

    May. 24, 2018

  • IMS graduate student Anna Douglas selected for prestigious entrepreneurship program

    IMS graduate student Anna Douglas selected for prestigious entrepreneurship program

    An interdisciplinary materials science graduate student has been selected for a prestigious entrepreneurship program to scale and commercialize a revolutionary method of carbon nanotube production. Anna Douglas is one of five entrepreneurs selected for the inaugural cohort of the Department of Energy Innovation Crossroads program at Oak Ridge National Laboratory… Read More

    Jun. 7, 2017

  • Quantum dots made from fool’s gold boost battery performance

    Quantum dots made from fool’s gold boost battery performance

    If you add quantum dots – nanocrystals 10,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair – to a smartphone battery it will charge in 30 seconds, but the effect only lasts for a few recharge cycles. However, a group of researchers at Vanderbilt University … Read More

    Nov. 11, 2015