NREL Researcher Silvana Ovaitt Honored With Award From Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers

Ovaitt's Mentors Taught Her That Education and Outreach Make a Difference. Now She Is Showing the Next Generation of Scientists How To Pay It Forward.

Sept. 24, 2024 | By Jenn Fields | Contact media relations
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Researcher Silvana Ovaitt plants crops in ground between solar panels.
Researcher Silvana Ovaitt plants crops in a garden row at the bifacial agrivoltaics array on the National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s campus in 2023. Photo by Joe DelNero, NREL

Silvana Ovaitt is already known as a rising star around the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) for her research advancing bifacial photovoltaic (PV) performance, not to mention her already-extensive record of leadership in community and educational outreach. Now, the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers (SHPE) has made it official by honoring Ovaitt with a STAR of Tomorrow Award for 2024.

"I'm very honored to receive this award because SHPE is such a fundamental organization shaping Latinx career paths, and it's great to be recognized and be able to give a wider platform to the amazing activities I am part of, like the Hands-On PV Experience (HOPE), bifacial research, international collaborations, and more," Ovaitt said.

The SHPE Technical Achievement and Recognition Awards, or STAR Awards, honor those working across science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields. SHPE gives two STAR Awards—one in government and one in corporate. The STAR of Tomorrow Award – Government recognizes an individual who has demonstrated excellence in their technical work and a commitment to leadership, mentoring, and community service.

"Dr. Ovaitt's exceptional technical skills, commitment to research, and selfless support to the STEM community make her truly deserving of the STAR of Tomorrow Award," said STAR Awards Chair Diana Gomez.

Ovaitt first arrived at NREL as a participant in a workshop she now leads. She attended the HOPE workshop as a student in 2016, then joined the program's staff after becoming an NREL researcher. She became part of program leadership in 2021. A core program at the U.S. Department of Energy's Solar Energy Technologies Office, HOPE brings Ph.D. students to NREL to learn more about PV fabrication, metrology, and characterization to encourage university PV research. Ovaitt experienced how the program can serve as a spark for a student's future career in PV research, and now every summer she helps ignite that spark for a new group of students by welcoming them to NREL.

Headshot of Silvana Ovaitt.
Silvana Ovaitt. Photo by Gregory Cooper, NREL

Leading the workshop is just one of many projects that seamlessly combine Ovaitt's commitment to outreach and mentorship with her current research interests. Her work in the Photovoltaic Reliability and System Performance group focuses on the optical and electrical performance of bifacial PV systems, modeling bifacial PV systems, and circularity pathways for PV sustainability. Alongside her publications and conference presentations, she has lent her talents to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts, serving on NREL's Hispanic and Latinx Alliance and Women's Network employee resource groups and nationally leading the Women in PV Committee and DEI initiatives at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers' Photovoltaic Specialists Conference. She also creates tools to help researchers consider energy justice in their work.

"Outreach is awesome for bringing science to students who would otherwise not have access to it," Ovaitt said. "It helps me go back to the basics of how and why we do the research that we do, and I also learn how to better share and teach it in an accessible way—which benefits me for writing proposals and talking to legislators and wider audiences. The mentors who have shaped my path were all very good at this, and I love paying it forward."

NREL researcher Chris Deline said he has been impressed with her work from the start.

"I have known Silvana since we conducted research together during her Ph.D. program at the University of Arizona, and I was blown away by her energy, research knowledge, and strategic vision," said Deline, manager of the U.S. Department of Energy's Regional Test Center program for field assessment of novel PV technologies at NREL. "She puts 100% effort into her technical research and publications and also somehow puts another 100% into external collaborations and stakeholder outreach. I place Silvana as one of the most impactful early career researchers that we have at NREL in her accomplishments and in her technical merit."

SHPE is not the only organization that has recognized Ovaitt's work this year. She was also invited to the National Academy of Engineering's U.S. Frontiers of Engineering symposium, and she received the PowerMark Early Career Prize in PV Reliability during NREL's PV Reliability Workshop in March.

Ovaitt and the other award recipients will be honored at SHPE's STAR Awards ceremony during the organization's national convention Oct. 30–Nov. 3, 2024, in Anaheim, California. SHPE is the largest U.S. organization representing Hispanics in STEM fields, and it will celebrate its 50th anniversary at the 2024 convention.

Learn more about NREL's PV reliability and system performance research and the Hands-On Photovoltaics Experience (HOPE) for graduate students, and find out more about the STAR Awards.

Tags: Awards,Photovoltaics