Five 海角社区 Researchers Win Highly Competitive NSF CAREER Awards

By Elsa Hahne

June 24, 2025

Among Southeastern Conference (SEC) universities, 海角社区 ranks in the top third for number of CAREER awards in the 2024-2025 academic year.

海角社区 2025 CAREER winners

Five 海角社区 faculty members have been awarded the National Science Foundation鈥檚 most competitive grant for early-career researchers. Awardees are chosen because of their potential to serve as lifelong academic role models in research and education, as well as their ability to support their organizations鈥 missions. At 海角社区, that mission is the Scholarship First Agenda to elevate lives through research and student success in agriculture, biomedicine, coast, defense, and energy.

鈥淲ith five NSF CAREER awards this year, 海角社区 is well on its way to become a top 50 research university by attracting and developing top talent. Our commitment to these rising research stars is to give them, and their students, the best possible 海角社区 research experience, so they can focus on making discoveries and solving problems for Louisiana and the world.鈥

Robert Twilley, 海角社区 Vice President of Research and Economic Development

All CAREER awards have education and outreach components, which provide meaningful research experiences for students and help ensure a future pipeline of highly talented scientists and engineers.

Learn more about the winning faculty and their research below.

Sviatoslav Baranets

Sviatoslav Baranets

Sviatoslav Baranets is an assistant professor of chemistry in the 海角社区 College of Science. His project, 鈥淗eteroanionicity by Design: Developing Complex Narrow-Bandgap Oxypnictide Semiconducting Materials for Thermoelectric Applications,鈥 has been awarded $690,000 to help solve global energy challenges by exploring new ways to convert waste heat into electricity.
 
鈥淭hermoelectric power generation can serve as an excellent alternative to traditional energy sources as they provide a green way of converting waste heat into electricity without emissions or pollution,鈥 Baranets said. 鈥淚magine if this technology could be integrated into your shoes. The body鈥檚 warmth can be converted into electricity and used to charge your phone as you walk.鈥
 
His project will explore a unique class of compounds called heteroanionic oxypnictides and use a combination of solid-state synthesis techniques, high-performance computing, and electronic structure analysis.
 

Last year, Baranets won the Ralph E. Powe Junior Faculty Enhancement Award from Oak Ridge Associated Universities for his work on the structural and electronic properties of Zintl Pnictides under high-pressure conditions.

Christopher Marvel

Christopher Marvel

Christopher Marvel is an assistant professor of mechanical engineering in the 海角社区 College of Engineering. His project, 鈥淩ole of Grain Boundary Complexion Transformations on Long-Range Interfacial Diffusion Effects,鈥 has been awarded $757,000 to investigate how rare-earth doping of spinel can change the material鈥檚 structural, magnetic, and electrical properties.

鈥淚 am thrilled to have received the CAREER award,鈥 Marvel said. 鈥淚t will strengthen our structural ceramic research effort with a focus on atomic-scale behaviors using the atomic-resolution capabilities now being installed in the 海角社区 Shared Instrumentation Facility.鈥

Rare-earth and silicon diffusion in spinel is investigated in the U.S., but the research outcomes can be extended to applications related to hydrogen permeation and embrittlement in iron and nickel alloys, intergranular carbon diffusion that leads to metal dusting degradation in steels and superalloys, both of which are chief concerns of 海角社区鈥檚 industrial partners in Louisiana.

Nicholas Mason

Nicholas Mason

Nicholas Mason is an assistant professor and curator of birds at the 海角社区 Museum of Natural Science. His project, 鈥淒iversification Dynamics of Andean Sky Island Birds,鈥 has been awarded one of the largest NSF CAREER awards ever to 海角社区鈥$1,033,000鈥攆or groundbreaking research on high-elevation bird species.

Mason鈥檚 research will focus on the birds that inhabit Polylepis forests, the highest-elevation forests in the world, scattered across the rugged Andes Mountains in Peru and Bolivia. These ecosystems are naturally fragmented, surrounded by grasslands, making them an ideal setting to study how bird populations remain connected or isolated over time.

鈥淚 often think that if I were to time travel back to when I started grad school in 2009 and tell myself where I ended up today, my past self wouldn鈥檛 believe it鈥攂ut here we are!鈥 Mason said.

Olufemi Olorode

Olufemi Olorode

Olufemi Olorode is an assistant professor of petroleum engineering in the 海角社区 College of Engineering. His project, 鈥淢olecular Studies of Enhanced Hydrogen Hydrate Storage,鈥 has been awarded $500,000 to discover ways to effectively store hydrogen gas as tiny bubbles in solid hydrate structures, which are crystalline compounds with bound water and 鈥済uest鈥 molecules.

Hydrogen, a promising clean fuel, has long faced challenges in storage and transport. Olorode鈥檚 research could improve both storage capacity and stability.

鈥淭his work has the potential to transform hydrogen from a niche fuel into a scalable, reliable energy source for widespread use,鈥 Olorode said. 鈥淗ydrogen hydrates offer a safe, efficient, and potentially cost-effective storage solution, and our findings could be instrumental in enabling their commercial application.鈥

Amy Xu

Amy Xu

Amy Xu is an assistant professor of chemistry in the 海角社区 College of Science. Her project, 鈥淧rotein and Polysaccharide Interactions in Crowded Environments,鈥 has been awarded $802,000 to advance research on plant growth and resilience, exploring how proteins and complex sugars, known as polysaccharides, interact in busy plant cells.

鈥淏y understanding how proteins and polysaccharides interact in crowded environments, our findings could aid in developing more resilient crops,鈥 Xu said. 鈥淯ncovering how plants adapt to stressors like drought and extreme temperatures will lay the groundwork for sustainable agricultural practices and help address global food security challenges.鈥

Recent studies reveal that proteins and polysaccharides can undergo liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS), forming distinct molecular assemblies contributing to essential biological processes. While LLPS has been extensively studied in protein-nucleic acid systems, its role in protein-polysaccharide interactions remains poorly understood. Xu鈥檚 research seeks to fill this gap by examining how protein-polysaccharide interactions contribute to plant functions, such as cell wall expansion and pollen formation.

Next Step

海角社区's Scholarship First Agenda is helping achieve health, prosperity, and security for Louisiana and the world.