• Skip to Management
  • Skip to Main menu
  • Skip to Page content
CHIC Logo
  • WISTA
  • WISTA.Plan
  • WISTA.Service
WISTA direkt
Search
  • de
  • en
  • CHIC Logo
  • News / Events
    • Overview
    • CHIC on LinkedIn
  • Company Directory
  • Working Environments
  • WISTA
  • WISTA.Plan
  • WISTA.Service
WISTA direkt

News / Events

  • Overview
  • CHIC on LinkedIn
  • Charlottenburg
  • News / Events
17. June 2025

Michael Naguib is visiting HZB as a Humboldt Research Awardee

The US scientist received funding to research novel nanomaterials for energy and environmental applications

Portrait Michael Naguib
© Paula Burch-Celentano/ Tulane University

Professor Michael Naguib, from Tulane University in the USA, is one of the discoverers of a new class of 2D materials: MXenes are characterised by a puff pastry-like structure and have many applications, such as in the production of green hydrogen or as storage media for electrical energy. During his Humboldt Research Award in 2025, Professor Naguib is working with Prof Volker Presser at the Leibniz Institute for New Materials in Saarbrücken and with Dr Tristan Petit at HZB.

Michael Naguib, Ph.D., is an Ken & Ruth Arnold Early Career Professor in Science and Engineering at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. He is a leading expert in the field of two-dimensional materials. His research group at Tulane University focuses on the synthesis and characterization of novel nanomaterials, including MXenes and Transition Metal Carbo-chalcogenides, for energy and environmental applications.

He completed his doctorate in 2014 at Drexel University, where he was involved in the discovery of a new class of materials. At that time, he tested MAX phases (layered ceramics) as electrode materials for lithium batteries. To create more space for the lithium ions, he used an acid and discovered that the “A” layers in the MAX phases had been selectively removed, transforming the remaining MX layers into a structure that, under a scanning electron microscope, resembled puff pastry: MXene.

To date, a wide range of MXenes have been synthesised. Their applications are also highly diverse: MXenes can be used as electrodes for energy storage devices, in catalysis and as sensors for medical applications. ‘I am delighted to deepen our collaboration with Tristan Petit and his team at HZB,’ says Naguib. ‘We will be discussing several fundamental questions regarding our novel materials and preparing a series of experiments to conduct at BESSY II to help us answering these questions.’

More information on Humboldt Research Award

Contact:

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie
Young Investigator Group Nanoscale Solid-Liquid Interfaces
CE-NSLI-office(at)helmholtz-berlin.de
www.helmholtz-berlin.de

 

Source: HZB, 16 June 2025

Research Success Stories Microsystems / Materials

Related News

  • Image from scanning electron microscope

    MXenes boost the effectiveness of catalysts for the production of green hydrogen

    HZB team shows a new way to highly efficient and inexpensive catalysts
  • Surface of a Vanadium carbide MXene © B. Schmiedecke/HZB

    MXenes show talent as catalyst for the production of green hydrogen

    This class of materials is more stable and efficient than the best metal oxide catalysts currently available
  • Scanning X-ray images of a dismounted Li-ion battery with cycled MXene electrode © HZB

    MXenes for energy storage: Chemical imaging more than just surface deep

    Scanning X-ray microscopy (SXM) at MAXYMUS beamline of BESSY II enables the characterization of layered materials in complex systems
  • The experiment at BessyII © M. Künsting /HZB

    HZB team investigates charge transport in MXenes

    Superstore MXene are considered an exciting new class of materials for energy storage
  • first image taken by MYSTIIC © HZB

    New X-ray microscope put into operation at BESSY II

    MYSTIIC offers higher precision and more options for scanning surfaces and investigating bulk samples in transmission
  • MXenes © Martin Künsting/HZB

    New class of materials for energy storage researched at HZB

    2D titanium carbides store large amounts of electrical energy and can be charged and discharged in a matter of seconds

Related Institutions

  • Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie GmbH, Elektronenspeicherring BESSY II
  • LinkedInshare0
  • Facebookshare0
  • WhatsAppshare0
  • E-Mail
  • © WISTA Management GmbH
  • Legal Notice
  • Privacy Policy
  • Social Media
  • Contact
Zukunftsort Charlottenburg Logo