
Emily A. Carter
· Gerhard R. Andlinger Professor in Energy and the Environment Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace EngineeringVerifiedPrinceton University · Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Active 1984–2026
About
Emily A. Carter is the Gerhard R. Andlinger Professor in Energy and the Environment and a Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at Princeton University. She is also affiliated with the Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment and Applied and Computational Mathematics. Since joining Princeton in 2004, she has developed a distinguished career in physical chemistry, focusing on the development and application of quantum mechanical simulation techniques to enable the discovery and design of materials for sustainable production of fuels, chemicals, and materials. Her research supports the creation of innovative solutions to global challenges related to energy and the environment. Dr. Carter has held numerous leadership roles, including founding director of Princeton’s Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment, Dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Science, and senior strategic advisor at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory. Her work at PPPL since 2022 involves diversifying research into electromanufacturing, solar radiation management, microelectronics, and quantum information science. She has an extensive publication record with over 475 publications and patents, and her contributions have been recognized through election to prestigious academies such as the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Royal Society. Her academic background includes a B.S. in Chemistry from UC Berkeley and a Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from Caltech.
Research topics
- Chemistry
- Materials science
- Computer Science
- Optoelectronics
- Organic chemistry
- Mathematics
- Engineering
- Computational chemistry
- Nanotechnology
- Engineering physics
- Physics
- Photochemistry
- Chemical engineering
- Physical chemistry
- Environmental science
- Chemical physics
- Database
- Pure mathematics
- Inorganic chemistry
Selected publications
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2026-01-01
preprintOpen accessJournal of Chemical Theory and Computation · 2026-02-19
articleOpen accessSenior author-electron valence state second-order perturbation theory (DMRG-NEVPT2) methods in the PySCF code. Using embedded DMRGSCF and embedded DMRG-NEVPT2, we analyze CO adsorption on Ni-, Rh-, Pd-, and Pt-doped Ag(100) with different active spaces. We show that the active spaces approachable with conventional multireference methods lead to overbinding of CO due to an inability to treat all of the dopant d-orbitals on equal footing. Larger active spaces, which are easily treated by both DMRGSCF and DMRG-NEVPT2, yield much more reasonable adsorption free energies. Our findings suggest that future multireference calculations of these systems should similarly employ active spaces containing all of the dopant d-orbitals along with sp-band orbitals of the host metal near the Fermi level. Emb-DMRG-NEVPT2 is a method that can be broadly applied to study catalytic reactions on metal surfaces when large active spaces are required.
The Journal of Physical Chemistry C · 2026-02-27 · 2 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingCarbon–carbon (C–C) bond formation is necessary for hydrocarbon (and oxygenate) synthesis beyond methane (and formate/formic acid) during electrochemical CO and CO2 reduction (ECOR and ECO2R). Cu has notable ability to form hydrocarbons compared to other pure metals. In particular, the (100) facet of face-centered cubic Cu forms ethylene competitively with H2 and methane during both ECOR and ECO2R. Past simulations based on density functional theory (DFT) with standard exchange-correlation functional approximations predict fast nonelectroactive C–C bond formation channels involving adsorbed (*) CO together with another *CO, formyl (*CHO), or hydroxymethylidyne (*COH), forming OC*–*CO, OC*–CHO*, and OC*–*COH, respectively. Such simulations support the prevailing hypothesis that emergence of C2 products is kinetically determined at the early stages of the reduction chemistry. Here we show, via simulations with more accurate many-body, i.e., “correlated”, wavefunction theory (enabled by an embedding scheme), that the coupling of *CO with a *CO or a *COH (previously predicted at the same level of theory to kinetically dominate over *CHO as the one-electron reduction product of *CO) is highly activated (kinetically impeded), with free energy barriers >1 eV, in contradiction to previous DFT-based simulations. Intriguingly, we find that the coupling of two adjacent *COHs incurs only a small barrier (<0.3 eV) and is exoergic (< –1 eV); however, given the predicted low surface mobility of *COH, the emergence of HOC*–*COH is also improbable, at least at low *COH coverages. We therefore conclude that it is highly unlikely for *CO to participate in nonelectroactive C–C bond formation on pristine Cu(100), contrary to conventional wisdom, and that the energetically favorable *COH dimerization may occur only after substantial buildup of *COH on the surface.
Figshare · 2026-02-25
articleSenior authorFormation of hydrocarbons containing two or more carbon atoms (C<sub>2+</sub>) during heterogeneous electrochemical CO and CO<sub>2</sub> reduction (ECOR and ECO<sub>2</sub>R) only occurs, among pure metals, on Cu electrodes. Moreover, the activity and selectivity is facet dependent, with Cu(100) generally preferentially forming ethylene over methane. Previously, we found via quantum-mechanics-based modeling that, unlike standard density functional theory, more accurate correlated wavefunction methods predict that non-electroactive coupling pathways involving two adsorbed COs (*CO) or a *CO and a *COH to form C–C bonds on Cu(100) are kinetically inhibited, with the former also thermodynamically unfavorable. Here, we extend that embedded complete active space second order perturbation theory (ECASPT2) study, further showing that electrochemical coupling of two *COs to form an anionic dimer [OC*–*CO]<sup>(1+δ)–</sup>, followed by protonation to form [OC*–*COH]<sup>δ−</sup>, is not kinetically competitive with the reduction of *CO to *COH at relevant ECO/CO<sub>2</sub>R potentials. Our simulations therefore suggest that the ability of Cu(100) to electrochemically synthesize C<sub>2+</sub> molecules from CO and CO<sub>2</sub> is unlikely to be via *CO, at least on pristine Cu(100). Instead, hydrogenated CO species (*COH, *CH<sub><i>x</i></sub>OH, or *CH<sub><i>x</i></sub>) are most likely to be the key intermediates in C–C bond formation.
arXiv (Cornell University) · 2026-03-16
preprintOpen accessSenior authorAchieving chemical accuracy for molecular simulations remains a central challenge in computational chemistry. Here, we present an embedded correlated wavefunction transfer learning (ECW-TL) framework for accurately simulating molecular dynamics in the condensed phase. ECW-TL incorporates high-level electron exchange and correlation effects in ECW theory while preserving training and computational efficiency of machine learned interatomic potentials. We demonstrate the framework on Ca2+-CO32- ion pairing in aqueous solution, a key process underlying CO2 mineralization in seawater. As proof of principle, we first show that finetuning a DFT-revPBE-D3(BJ) baseline model with embedded-DFT-SCAN data reproduces the DFT-SCAN free-energy surface within 1 kcal/mol across all solvation states. Extending the framework to embedded MP2 and localized natural-orbital CCSD(T) further refines the free-energy profile, revealing the crucial role of exact electron exchange and correlation in determining ion-pair stability and structure. ECW-TL thus provides a general, data-efficient route for transferring CW accuracy to large-scale simulations of complex aqueous and interfacial chemical processes.
Journal of the American Chemical Society · 2026-02-12 · 2 citations
articleOpen accessSenior author) are most likely to be the key intermediates in C-C bond formation.
Learning Traversable Scene Structures for Embodied Navigation with Movable Object Constraints
Preprints.org · 2026-01-26
preprintOpen accessUnderstanding how movable objects affect navigability is critical for embodied agents operating in realistic environments. This study proposes a learning-based approach to infer traversable scene structures under object mobility constraints. A neural graph encoder is trained to predict passability relations between spatial regions conditioned on object states, using RGB-D observations and interaction feedback. The model is trained on 15,000 simulated navigation trajectories generated in rearranged indoor scenes. Quantitative evaluation shows that the learned scene structure reduces navigation failure due to blocked paths by 28.4% and improves average navigation efficiency by 16.7% compared with static scene graph representations.
ArXiv.org · 2026-03-16
articleOpen accessSenior authorAchieving chemical accuracy for molecular simulations remains a central challenge in computational chemistry. Here, we present an embedded correlated wavefunction transfer learning (ECW-TL) framework for accurately simulating molecular dynamics in the condensed phase. ECW-TL incorporates high-level electron exchange and correlation effects in ECW theory while preserving training and computational efficiency of machine learned interatomic potentials. We demonstrate the framework on Ca2+-CO32- ion pairing in aqueous solution, a key process underlying CO2 mineralization in seawater. As proof of principle, we first show that finetuning a DFT-revPBE-D3(BJ) baseline model with embedded-DFT-SCAN data reproduces the DFT-SCAN free-energy surface within 1 kcal/mol across all solvation states. Extending the framework to embedded MP2 and localized natural-orbital CCSD(T) further refines the free-energy profile, revealing the crucial role of exact electron exchange and correlation in determining ion-pair stability and structure. ECW-TL thus provides a general, data-efficient route for transferring CW accuracy to large-scale simulations of complex aqueous and interfacial chemical processes.
Multi-Objective Design of Heat Sink Fins for Thermal Efficiency and Manufacturability
International Journal of Engineering Advances · 2025-03-17
articleOpen accessAs power densities in modern electronics increase, efficient thermal management is essential. Conventional heat sink designs often fail to balance heat dissipation, airflow resistance, and manufacturability. This study proposes an AI-driven optimization framework, integrating deep reinforcement learning (DRL) and multi-objective genetic algorithms (MOGA), to refine fin geometries while ensuring fabrication feasibility. Unlike conventional methods, this approach incorporates additive manufacturing constraints, bridging the gap between computational optimization and real-world implementation. Validated through computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations and experimental fabrication, the optimized design achieved a 14.3% reduction in maximum temperature and a 32.8% decrease in thermal resistance, ensuring a more uniform temperature distribution. It also maintained stable cooling performance across airflow variations, confirming its adaptability. Manufacturability analysis revealed height deviations of up to 0.4 mm, which could affect airflow, while thickness deviations remained within ± 0.05 mm, indicating high precision. These results highlight the importance of integrating fabrication constraints early in the design process to ensure optimization benefits translate into practical performance. This study shows that AI-driven optimization can enhance heat sink efficiency and reliability, offering a scalable approach for high-power electronics. Future work should refine manufacturing compensation models and transient thermal analysis to further improve real-world applicability.
Innovations in Sustainable Transportation Infrastructure for Cities
American Journal Of Civil Construction And Environmental Engineering · 2025-06-30
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingAs cities continue to grow and urbanize, sustainable transportation infrastructure has become essential for reducing carbon emissions, promoting environmental health, and improving urban mobility. Innovative approaches to sustainable transportation infrastructure are transforming the way cities plan and design transportation systems. This article explores the latest innovations in sustainable transportation infrastructure, focusing on green mobility solutions, energy-efficient public transit systems, and smart urban planning. It highlights the role of sustainable transportation in mitigating climate change, improving air quality, and promoting equitable access to transportation options for all city residents.
Recent grants
Linear Scaling Electronic Structure Methods for Molecules and Materials
NSF · $600k · 2009–2013
CDS&E: Correlated Wavefunction Methods for Gas and Condensed Phases
NSF · $420k · 2013–2018
Linear Scaling Electronic Structure Methods for Molecules and Materials
NSF · $420k · 2005–2009
Frequent coauthors
- 2921 shared
William C. Chueh
- 2918 shared
Robert H. Socolow
- 2916 shared
S. Sampath
Arunai Engineering College
- 2916 shared
Kate Bandoo
Imperial College London
- 2916 shared
Sam Keltie
University of Twente
- 2916 shared
Dirk M. Guldi
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg
- 2916 shared
Yan Yu
Princeton University
- 2916 shared
Molina Santos
Aarhus University
Education
- 1988
Postdoctoral Fellow, Chemistry
University of Colorado
- 1987
PHD, Chemistry
California Institute of Technology
- 1982
BS, Chemistry
University of California Berkeley
Awards & honors
- Election to the U.S. National Academy of Sciences
- Election to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Election to the U.S. National Academy of Inventors
- Election to the U.S. National Academy of Engineering
- Election to the European Academy of Sciences
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