Singapore-Berkeley Research Initiative for Sustainable Energy

The Singapore-Berkeley Research Initiative for Sustainable Energy (SinBeRISE) was led by Berkeley Professor Connie Chang-Hasnain, and included 10-12 Berkeley faculty and adjunct faculty members and 25 faculty members from the National University of Singapore (NUS) and Nanyang Technological University (NTU) in Singapore. The program ended on 31 December 2018. SinBeRISE was located in the BEARS center on the CREATE campus in Singapore. 

The mission of SinBeRISE was explore novel approaches to harvest solar energy with high conversion efficiencies by advancing material and device technologies readily applicable for low cost manufacturing processes. The foci included conversion of solar energy into electrical energy (photovoltaics) and catalyzing the conversion of CO2 into liquid fuel (photoelectrochemical cells).  The BEARS faculty members who were designated as principal investigators of SinBeRISE each spent a cumulative one-year period in Singapore during the five-year grant period working closely with collaborators in NTU, NUS and other CREATE centers.

Latest News

  • Venky

    Prof. Venky appointed SinBeRISE NUS Program Lead

    Prof. Thirumalai “Venky” Venkatesan has been appointed as the new Program Lead for the SinBeRISE program at the National University of Singapore.

  • Chen

    SinBeRISE PI wins Lubrizol Young Materials Science Investigator Award

    We would like to extend our warmest congratulations to Associate Professor Chen Xiaodong for winning the 2015 Lubrizol Young Materials Science Investigator Award. This is an international award intended to recognize the contributions of individuals globally. Assoc Prof Chen will also present the Lubrizol Award Lectureship at the 5th Molecular Materials Meeting M3@Singapore.

  • SinBeRISE researchers appear in the Sunday Times

    Assistant Professor Nripan Mathews of the Materials Science and Engineering department and Associate Professors Sum Tze Chien of the Physics department at Nanyang Technological University appeared in an article in The Sunday Times, 19 April 2015. In the article they discussed the new organic – inorganic perovskite that could revolutionize the solar power industry.

SinBeRISE Annual Report