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MITEI’s Future Energy Systems Center starts six new research projects to enable a decarbonized future

The selected projects will address carbon capture, lithium supply chains, electrical grid planning, and more.
MIT Energy Initiative MITEI

The MIT Energy Initiative’s (MITEI) Future Energy Systems Center will fund six new projects, with topics ranging from sodium-metal batteries to co-designing low-carbon power plants. The selected projects will receive a combined total of $1.05 million in funding.

With these new projects included, the Future Energy Systems Center has supported a total of 69 projects led by MIT faculty and research scientists since 2021. As MITEI’s industry research consortium, the Center conducts integrated energy system analyses to provide insight into the technology, policy, and economics behind the evolving energy landscape—drawing from both traditional energy-related disciplines and cross-disciplinary fields.

This was the Center’s eighth round of project selections, which are selected twice a year by a Steering Committee comprised of MIT faculty members based on nominations from Center member companies, project impact, and balancing of the Center’s portfolio. Center projects have resulted in the publication of 76 peered review papers and informed a wide range of next-stage research projects. MITEI will host kick-off meetings for each of these new projects at the Center’s Spring 2026 workshop.

Brief descriptions of each of the new projects follow. 

Building-grid operation and planning

Residential buildings in the United States with heat electrification can strain grid capabilities and impact electricity rates, necessitating better operation and planning guidance for homeowners, policy makers, and utilities. This project is focused on:

PIs: Christoph Reinhart, professor of architecture, Pablo Duenas-Martinez, research scientist at MITEI, and Deep Deka, research scientist at MITEI

Co-designing gas turbines and carbon capture

If natural gas power plants and carbon capture systems are co-designed to run as one integrated system, their individual trade-offs can be addressed while optimizing their ability to provide low-carbon power together. This project is focused on:

PI: Sungho Shin, assistant professor of chemical engineering

Data-driven industrial carbon capture

More accurate cost and performance estimates for industrial carbon capture are needed to inform real-world deployment in hard-to-abate industries, like cement, steel, and blue hydrogen. This project is focused on:

PIs: Elsa Olivetti, Climate Project mission director and professor of materials science and engineering, and Randolph Kirchain, principal research scientist at the Materials Research Laboratory

Direct lithium extraction

Direct lithium extraction (DLE) technologies that pull lithium directly from local brines are on the rise to aid efforts in reducing reliance on the lithium supply chain dominated by China. This project is focused on:

PI: Yogesh Surendranath, professor of chemistry

Pathways for long-duration energy storage

Long-duration energy storage (LDES) can facilitate the decarbonization of the broader economy by supporting the integration of variable renewable energy into the grid, but significant challenges remain for the development and deployment of LDES technologies. To support the advancement of these crucial technologies, the Center has identified LDES as a strategic priority. This project is focused on:

PIs: Ruaridh Macdonald, research scientist at MITEI, and Asegun Henry, professor of mechanical engineering

Sodium battery innovations

Sodium-metal batteries are a low-cost, high-energy-density form of energy storage with the potential to compensate for future lithium shortages, but they require further fundamental research before commercialization is possible. This project is focused on:

PI: Yang Shao-Horn, professor of mechanical engineering


Research Areas

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