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New faculty member leads research on semiconductor alloys

A multi-institutional team led by NREL discovered a way to create new alloys that could form the basis of next-generation semiconductors. The NREL team includes (left to right) Stephan Lany, Aaron Holder, Paul Ndione, and Andriy Zakutayev.

A multi-institutional team led by NREL, including new ChBE faculty member Aaron Holder (second from left), discovered a way to create new alloys that could form the basis of next-generation semiconductors. The NREL team includes (from left) Stephan Lany, Holder, Paul Ndione and Andriy Zakutayev. Photo courtesy NREL.

A multi-institutional team led by the U.S. Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Laboratory discovered a way to create new alloys that could form the basis of next-generation semiconductors.

The team includes corresponding author Aaron Holder, who recently joined the CU Â鶹ӰԺ Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering. Holder is a co-PI of the NREL-led Energy Frontiers Research Center, the , and will hold a joint appointment between NREL and CU.

Semiconductor alloys already existÌý — often made from a combination of materials with similar atomic arrangements — but until now, researchers believed it was unrealistic to make alloys of certain constituents.

"Maybe in the past scientists looked at two materials and said I can't mix those two. What we're saying is think again," Holder said. Holder isÌýcorresponding author of a . "There is a way to do it."