Jane H. Davidson is an American mechanical engineer whose research involves renewable energy, thermal energy storage, alternative fuel, and solar-powered carbon capture and storage for the energy needs of homes, workplaces, and vehicles. She is a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Minnesota, where she directs the Solar Energy Laboratory,[1] and is the former Ronald L. and Janet A. Christenson chair of renewable energy at the university.[2]
Education and career
Davidson majored in Engineering Science and Mechanics at the University of Tennessee, where she earned a bachelor's degree in 1975 and a master's degree in 1976. She completed a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering at Duke University in 1984.[1]
Davidson was elected as a Fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) in 1998.[3] She has chaired the ASME Solar Energy Division, and was given the ASME Dedicated Service Award in 2003. In 2012 the ASME gave her their Frank Kreith Energy Award, "for significant research on solar systems for residential buildings and solar thermo chemical cycles to produce fuels".[2]
Davidson is also a Fellow of the American Solar Energy Society (ASES),[4] and was the 2007 winner of the ASES Charles Greeley Abbot Award.[5]
References
^ ab"Jane Davidson", Mechanical Engineering Faculty, University of Minnesota, retrieved 2022-05-17
Oral Memoirs of Jane Davidson, transcript, Baylor University Institute for Oral History Interviews, Interviewed by Byron Newberry on September 22, 2005, in Minneapolis, Minneota