Summary
Denis Kramer is a professor and internationally recognised research leader with nine years of formal experience and a two-decade career bridging theory and experiment in electrochemical energy conversion. He combines DFT-driven computational materials design with advanced electrochemical characterisation and synthesis to develop fuel cell and battery materials, with particular strength in oxide surface electrochemistry, nanoparticle thermodynamics and intercalation fundamentals. His appointments span leading institutions (Helmut-Schmidt-University, Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon, MIT, Imperial College and Southampton), reflecting a track record of translating first-principles insights into experimentally verifiable materials solutions. Denis is also skilled in in situ diagnostic methods and has explored unconventional topics such as mechanical stimulus–driven oxidation, indicating a willingness to pursue high-risk, high-reward research directions. Based in Hamburg, he blends deep theoretical expertise with hands-on experimental practice to tackle real-world energy technology challenges.
9 years of coding experience
9 years of employment as a software developer
Dr., Engineering, Dr., Engineering at Technische Universität Bergakademie Freiberg
English, German