A new journal linking all aspects of the chemical sciences relating to energy conversion and storage, alternative fuel technologies and environmental science.
Introducing New Board Members...
14 February 2008
Energy & Environment Science is delighted to welcome Robert Socolow to its Editorial Board.

Energy & Environment Science is also pleased to welcome Jonathan Abbatt, Bernie Bulkin, Francis J DiSalvo, Peter Dobson, James Dumesic, Elzbieta Frackowiak, Hermenegildo García, Harry Gray, Dirk Guldi, Barry Huebert, Saiful Islam, Bengt Kasemo, Jeffrey R Long, Thomas Moore and Jincai Zhao to its Advisory Board.
The Editorial Board and Advisory Board members are high calibre international scientists from both academia and industry and their research interests reflect the interdisciplinary nature of the journal.
Other members of the Editorial Board include:


Professor Steven E Koonin based in London has served as chief scientist of BP, the world's second largest independent oil company, since 2004. He was formerly Professor of Theoretical Physics at California Institute of Technology. His research interests include national security, higher education, global environmental change and energy.

Professor Arthur Nozik from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, USA is engaged in two areas of research that deal with phenomena at semiconductor-molecule interfaces; the dynamics of electron relaxation and transfer across these interfaces and size quantization effects in ultra small semiconductor nanocrystals and structures (quantum dots).

Professor Jefferson W Tester, MIT, USA has for the last 30 years been involved in chemical engineering process research, relating to energy extraction and conversion, and environmental control technologies including chemical processes in hydrothermal and supercritical media.

Professor Michael R Wasielewski is based at Northwestern University. His research focuses on photoinduced electron transfer and charge transport in organic molecules and materials, self-assembly of nanoscale materials, the primary events of photosynthesis, the magnetic properties of radical ion pairs, ultrafast optical and magnetic resonance techniques, and materials for molecular electronics and spintronics.
