Henry was born in Tallahassee, Florida, to Anthony Henry and Oare Dozier-Henry, both former professors at Florida A&M University (FAMU); his father is a middle school teacher and adjunct professor of political science and his mother is a professor of adult education.[1] At a young age, his parents exposed him to West African and African-American culture. At ten years old, he started playing the djembe. Henry also excelled in school and was admitted into a state program for gifted children.[1] After graduating from high school, he attended FAMU and graduated with a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering.[2] Working under Gang Chen, he earned his master's and doctorate degrees in mechanical engineering from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 2009.[2]
In 2016, Henry earned the National Science Foundation’s Career Award with a grant to study heat conduction via vibrations referred to as phonons. Using sonification, his research hopes to create an educational app to represent the unique vibrations of the elements in the periodic table as sounds audible to the human ear and to study the interaction between the different modes of vibration.[4][5]
On January 23, 2017, Henry’s team at Georgia Tech also achieved the highest recorded operating temperature, 1,200 °C (1,470 K), for a liquid pump which operated continuously for 72 hours.[6] The achievement was recognized by the Guinness World Records.[7] The pump is made entirely of ceramic materials and was able to pump molten tin heated to very high temperatures.[8][9]
Henry also conducts research into cost-effective methods to store renewable energy.[10] In a 2018 paper published Energy & Environmental Science, his team described a storage system, TEGS-MPV (thermal energy grid storage using multi-junction photovoltaics) and given the moniker "Sun in a box" in media sources. TEGS-MPV uses molten silicon as a battery to store energy as heat, ready to be delivered into an electrical grid on demand.[11][12][13] The system is slated to operate at costs significantly lower than existing electrical energy storage systems.[12][14]