Jacob Karni - CV:
Ph.D. – Mechanical Engineering, University of Minnesota, 1985
M. S. – Mechanical Engineering, University of Minnesota, 1982
B. S. – Civil Engineering, University of Minnesota, 1979
Prof. Karni has 20 years of research and development experience with keen interest
in the development of new methods for concentration, absorption, conversion,
transmission and storage of concentrated solar energy, and implementing these
methods in genuine solar power-conversion systems.
Karni was Assistant Professor at the Mechanical Engineering Dept. of SUNY at
Stony Brook, N.Y. from 1984 to 1989 and has been at the Weizmann Institute since
1989. He was a visiting professor at the University of Minnesota in the summers
of 1994 and 1996, and at Johns Hopkins University in the 1998-98 school year.
In January 2002, Prof. Karni was promoted to head the Weizmann’s Energy
Center and he also oversees the entire Institutes’ solar program.
Prof. Karni's main research interests center around the utilization of concentrated
solar energy at high temperatures. His pioneering work includes the development
of a novel concentrated sunlight absorber, a high-pressure receiver window,
a new Volumetric solar receiver, a non-imaging secondary optics device, and
a revolutionary concept for a non-isothermal high-temperature solar receiver.
A common denominator among the aforementioned methods is the ability to operate
at concentrations, temperatures, and pressure levels far above those previously
obtained with solar-driven devices; these abilities match or exceed the requirements
of state-of-the-art power generation, chemical processing, and propulsion systems.
Present studies include several methods of solar-driven hydrogen production
and a new concept for integrating solar and energy storage, which could significantly
reduce the cost of solar power generation. Prof. Karni and his team have conducted
several extensive comparative studies of solar and other renewable technologies
over the past 10 years.
Two industry-led commercialization programs based on Prof. Karni’s concepts
are currently underway. Prof. Karni has published over 70 scientific articles,
and holds 8 international patents. He is married, with four children.