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Andlinger Center News

June 16, 2026

Dane deQuilettes named to Scientific American’s Young American Scientists list

Scientific American has named Dane deQuilettes to the inaugural cohort of Young American Scientists, recognizing his work in clean-energy technologies.

Illustration of Dane deQuilettes
Dane deQuilettes. (Illustration by Jessine Hein, courtesy of Scientific American)

The Young American Scientists is a group of “28 early-career scientists based in the U.S. who are changing the world with their work,” according to the magazine’s announcement. Scientific American was founded in 1845 and is the oldest continuously published magazine in America. The editorial staff will host an event celebrating the work of this inaugural cohort on June 18.

DeQuilettes, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, designs new materials at the nanoscale for solar energy harvesting and quantum sensing. His lab develops advanced microscopy tools to probe how electrons behave in materials such as perovskites, a class of ultra-thin semiconductors with exceptional optical and electrical properties. And he has created some of the highest quality lab-grown diamonds ever made, a material that promises to transform emerging quantum information technologies. He earned a Ph.D. from the University of Washington and was a postdoctoral researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was then a member of the technical staff at MIT Lincoln Lab from 2021 to 2023. DeQuilettes was previously named to Forbes’ 30 Under 30. He is a cofounder and serves as the Chief Scientist for Optigon, Inc., a clean-energy company. He is associated faculty in the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory and the Princeton Materials Institute. He joined Princeton in 2026.

DeQuilettes was selected for advancing the understanding of perovskites and their use in energy. Scientific American also selected the Omenn-Darling Bioengineering Institute’s Kaiyi Jiang, an assistant professor of bioengineering, for his work using artificial intelligence in drug discovery. They will be featured in the July/August issue of Scientific American.

This item has been abridged from the full story available on the Princeton Engineering website.