Mohammad Ali Nasiri | Sustainable Energy Materials | Research Excellence Award

Research Excellence Award

Mohammad Ali Nasiri
University of Valencia, Spain

Mohammad Ali Nasiri
Affiliation University of Valencia
Country Spain
Scopus ID 57226509306
Documents 14
Citations 232
h-index 6
Subject Area Sustainable Energy Materials
Event Metallurgical Engineering Awards
ORCID 0000-0003-1376-3288

Mohammad Ali Nasiri is a researcher specializing in sustainable energy materials, nanostructured systems, thermoelectric technologies, energy storage materials, and advanced functional devices. His academic activities encompass materials engineering, nanotechnology, clean energy solutions, and the development of environmentally responsible technologies for future energy applications. The Research Excellence Award recognizes distinguished scholarly achievement, sustained research productivity, and contributions to scientific advancement through innovative investigation and interdisciplinary collaboration.[1]

Abstract

Mohammad Ali Nasiri has established a research profile centered on nanostructured materials, thermoelectric systems, sustainable energy technologies, energy storage materials, and advanced optoelectronic devices. His work integrates materials science, nanotechnology, and energy engineering to develop innovative solutions for energy conversion, harvesting, storage, and sensing applications. Through peer-reviewed publications, international collaborations, and contributions to sustainable material development, he has supported advancements in environmentally responsible energy technologies and functional material systems.[2]

Keywords

Sustainable Energy Materials; Thermoelectric Systems; Nanostructured Materials; Energy Storage Technologies; MXenes; Quantum Dots; Perovskites; Nanofabrication; Functional Materials; Optoelectronic Devices.

Introduction

Research in sustainable energy technologies increasingly relies on advanced materials capable of improving energy efficiency, storage performance, and environmental sustainability. Mohammad Ali Nasiri’s academic background includes doctoral training in nanoscience and nanotechnology together with multidisciplinary expertise spanning nanomaterials science and aerospace engineering. His work contributes to emerging technologies designed to address challenges associated with clean energy generation, thermal management, and advanced electronic systems.[1]

Research Profile

As a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Institute of Materials Science (ICMUV), University of Valencia, Mohammad Ali Nasiri conducts research focused on the synthesis, characterization, and application of advanced materials for sustainable energy systems. His experience includes cleanroom microfabrication, nanofabrication technologies, thermal transport studies, and the development of functional materials for energy harvesting and storage applications. His scholarly record includes peer-reviewed publications, international collaborations, and participation in multiple research projects related to advanced energy technologies.[2]

Research Contributions

Mohammad Ali Nasiri’s contributions include research on ionic thermoelectric systems, conductive polymer nanocomposites, MXene-based materials, ultrathin metallic electrodes, lignin-derived sustainable materials, and advanced energy-storage architectures. His investigations emphasize scalable fabrication approaches and environmentally responsible material selection to improve performance in energy conversion and storage devices. These efforts support broader scientific objectives associated with renewable energy adoption and sustainable technological development.[3]

Publications

The researcher has authored publications in internationally recognized journals covering materials science, energy storage, functional materials, and applied physics. His publication portfolio demonstrates interdisciplinary engagement across nanotechnology, energy systems, and sustainable materials research.[4]

  • Advanced Functional Materials
  • Chemical Science
  • Advanced Optical Materials
  • Applied Physics Reviews
  • Journal of Energy Storage

Research Impact

Mohammad Ali Nasiri’s research is reflected through scholarly citations, collaborative projects, peer-review activities, and contributions to the advancement of sustainable energy materials. His work supports ongoing efforts to improve energy efficiency and develop renewable-material-based technologies capable of addressing future environmental and industrial challenges. The integration of sustainable feedstocks with advanced nanomaterials represents a notable aspect of his research direction.[3]

Award Suitability

The Research Excellence Award recognizes individuals who demonstrate sustained scholarly productivity, innovative research contributions, and measurable influence within their fields. Mohammad Ali Nasiri’s record of research activity, international collaboration, publication output, and commitment to sustainable energy technologies aligns with the objectives of the award. His multidisciplinary expertise contributes to advancing scientific understanding while supporting practical applications in energy conversion, storage, and advanced materials engineering.[5]

Conclusion

Mohammad Ali Nasiri’s academic and research achievements illustrate a consistent commitment to scientific investigation in sustainable energy materials and nanotechnology. Through interdisciplinary research, publication activity, collaborative engagement, and contributions to advanced material development, he has supported the advancement of knowledge relevant to contemporary energy and environmental challenges. His profile represents the qualities commonly associated with research excellence within the international scientific community.

References

  1. Elsevier. (n.d.). Scopus author details: Mohammad Ali Nasiri, Author ID 57226509306. Scopus.
    https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=57226509306
  2. Nasiri, M.A., et. al. (2024). Recent advances in ionic thermoelectric systems and theoretical modelling. Chemical Science.
    https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlehtml/2018/dg/d4sc04158e
  3. Nasiri, M.A., et. al. (2026). Carbonization-Enhanced Bio-Based Multilayer Electrodes for Sustainable Energy Storage. Journal of Energy Storage.
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352152X26026046
  4. Nasiri, M.A., et. al. (2024). Ultrathin transparent nickel electrodes for thermoelectric applications.
    https://advanced.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/admi.202300705
  5. Nasiri, M.A., et. al. (2025). Lignin-Derived ionic hydrogels for thermoelectric energy harvesting. ACS Applied Polymer Materials
    https://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/acsapm.4c03816

Humaira Rashid Khan | Renewable Energy | Best Researcher Award

Dr. Humaira Rashid Khan | Renewable Energy | Best Researcher Award

Researcher at Universiti Sains Malaysia | Pakistan

Dr. Humaira Rashid Khan is a highly accomplished materials scientist whose research excellence in energy storage, nanomaterials, and photoelectrochemical systems strongly aligns with the expectations of the Best Researcher Award. Her work spans advanced polymer electrolyte membranes, Li–air battery challenges, supercapacitor development, nanocomposite engineering, and ZnO-based photoanodes for solar-driven water splitting, demonstrating both depth and multidisciplinary impact. She has produced significant contributions as evidenced by her 118 Scopus citations, 4 Scopus-indexed documents, and an h-index of 3, while her broader scholarly footprint includes more than 25 peer-reviewed publications in high-impact Q1 and Q2 journals, book chapters with Springer and Elsevier, and major review articles framing the future of next-generation electrochemical devices. Her publications address critical bottlenecks in battery chemistries, propose innovative membrane-fabrication strategies, and report enhanced photocurrent densities through rational nanostructure engineering, reflecting both originality and practical relevance. Dr. Khan has consistently advanced the scientific understanding of charge-transfer mechanisms, thin-film fabrication, dopant-driven band-gap tuning, and nanostructured electrode performance, supporting the global transition toward clean and sustainable energy technologies. Her international postdoctoral research experience, collaborative projects, and contributions to device-level prototypes highlight her ability to translate complex materials science concepts into scalable solutions. Through her rigorous experimentation, mastery of electrochemical and spectroscopic techniques, and sustained high-quality publication record, Dr. Khan demonstrates the research leadership, innovation, and scholarly influence that make her highly suitable for recognition under the Best Researcher Award category.

Profiles : Scopus | ORCID | Google Scholar

Featured Publications

Khan, H. R., & Ahmad, A. L. (2025). Supercapacitors: Overcoming current limitations and charting the course for next-generation energy storage. Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, 141, 46–66. Cited by 149

Khan, H. R., & Ahmad, A. L. (2025). Vapor induced phase separation approach for fabricating high-performance PVDF-HFP/PEO polymer electrolyte membranes with improved electrochemical properties. Materials Today Communications, 42, 111330. Cited by 6

Shuja, F. S. A., Khan, H. R., Murtaza, I., Ashraf, S., & Yousra, … (2024). Supercapacitors for energy storage applications: Materials, devices and future directions: A comprehensive review. Journal of Alloys and Compounds. Cited by 89

Khan, M. S., Murtaza, I., Shuja, A., Fahad, S., Khan, M. W., Ahmmad, J., … Khan, H. R. (2024). Energy on-the-go: V2O5-pBOA-Graphene nanocomposite for wearable supercapacitor applications. Electrochimica Acta, 486, 144119. Cited by 14

Muhammad Shahid Khan, A. N., Murtaza, I., Shuja, A., & Khan, H. R. (2024). Tailored NiO-pBOA-GNP ternary nanocomposite: Advances in flexible supercapacitors and practical applications for wearable technology and environmental monitoring. Journal of Energy Storage, 86, 111128. Cited by 17