4 women to watch

Five centuries after the start of the scientific revolution, men still dominate STEM fields. But women’s contributions to science have gained ground, a 2022 study suggests.

In honor of International Women’s Day, we celebrate a few of Khalifa University’s many outstanding women who are helping to break barriers.

ANNA MARIA PAPPA

“Women should always remember that there are numerous examples of highly successful women who have excelled despite challenges, serving as leaders in their respective fields. Importantly, many have successfully balanced their careers and family life,” says Anna Maria Pappa, assistant professor of the Department of Biomedical Engineering & Biotechnology.

Pappa, who has a Ph.D. from École des Mines de Saint-Étienne in France, leads the on-chip/biosensors group focused on developing cutting-edge technologies for next-generation miniaturized sensors with applications in health care and environmental science.

Pappa credits her decision to leave her home in Greece to study abroad with being a risk-taker.

CAPTION: Anna Maria Pappa

Her reward: meeting and working with people from all over the world. “Creativity thrives in diverse environments, ultimately leading to progress,” she says.

During her time at Cambridge University, she served as a science ambassador, visiting schools to embolden girls to chase STEM careers. She believes that “the dominance of males in key senior positions contributes to a lack of female role models and a scarcity of a female mindset.”

CAPTION: Anna Maria Pappa labwork

Pappa’s advice to young women is to remain open, never underestimate their abilities and don’t be deterred by stereotypes. She also credits her success with surrounding herself with a strong support system of successful women and men.

Pappa is on the editorial board of several journals and has received multiple awards for her research, including the L’Oréal-UNESCO Women in Science Award. She is listed among the MIT Technology Review’s Innovators Under 35 and has won several awards in entrepreneurship and innovation.

ELENA FANTINO

“Diversification is a protection against ignorance,” Warren Buffett once advised. While he was talking about investing, this advice is applicable across any industry — science included. And Elena Fantino agrees.

Fantino, an associate professor in aerospace engineering who holds an M.Sc in astronomy and a Ph.D. in space sciences and technologies, credits her new ideas these days to her unusual and diversified career path.

CAPTION: Elena Fantino

“My journey as a scientist has passed through different fields, disciplines and experiences. I started as an astrophysicist with a passion for celestial mechanics, then I became a space engineer. I worked in space-mission development. For some time, I worked as a software engineer in the private sector. Eventually, I returned to academia and specialized in satellite dynamics,” she says.

Fantino believes that education is at the base of inclusion and there is much work required to equalize the gender gap in STEM.


The solution, she says, is a shift in societal mindset, and that comes from hard work with campaigns, programs and incentives for girls and women. And these require dedicated action.

She also believes that Khalifa University is on the right track, but there’s always more that can be done.

“Khalifa University with its large female-to-male student ratio is leading this transformation, and we must be very proud of it. However, we need to hire more women faculty and researchers not only for their contribution to science and engineering, but also to inspire and encourage the younger generations through their example,” she tells KUST Review. “From my experience as an educator, I can say that female students are strongly inspired by women faculty and researchers. I can sense this in my lectures. Our girls see us as examples to follow because we reached where many of them would like to be. We show them that everything is possible despite the challenges.”

CAPTION: Trajectory looping around Enceladus, the moon of Saturn that became popular after the detection of vapor plumes emanating from its pole. This trajectory enables extended observations of the surface including the polar regions IMAGE: Elena Fantino

Fantino says her career path was inspired by one of her own teachers, and though she encountered gender bias, she credits maturity and experience with overcoming challenges.

Role models are also key to successful women in STEM, but not just to even out the numbers.

“For sure, we need to see more women in senior management roles, and not just as a means to ensure inclusion and fight gender inequalities. We need them because of the different perspectives and unique ideas that women can bring to those jobs,” she says.

Fantino specializes in space-mission analysis, space geodesy, space astrometry, celestial mechanics and astrodynamics and has participated in several mission projects. She has advised more than 40 graduate students and is a member of both the Astrodynamics Technical Committee of the International Astronautical Federation and the Space Dynamics Group of the Technical University of Madrid.

At Khalifa University, she leads the astrodynamics research group and participates in the activities of the Space Technology and Innovation Center.

LOURDES VEGA

When Lourdes Vega, director of the Research and Innovation Center on CO2 and Hydrogen at Khalifa University, spoke at EXPO 2020 to a group of secondary students, she asked them for the names of five male scientists. The answers came easily. But when she asked them to name five female scientists, the only name put forward was Marie Curie.

Curie, arguably the most famous female scientist of all time known for her work on the properties of radium as therapeutics and winner of two Nobel Prizes (physics and chemistry), is not a surprising answer. What is surprising is that she was the only answer.

Vega says she has had many experiences in her career in which being a minority stood out, but she also believes that doing what you love is the key to a rewarding life. And these choices should be made inherently. “Our girls and young women need to know that (a career choice) is a natural choice, depending on their curiosity and interests, and that they have an important voice. A scientific career is not easy, but it is very rewarding.”

Though science is highly competitive, Vega says most of her successes were when working in a team environment, and she says this is something women bring to STEM — a different perspective and collaboration.

CAPTION: Lourdes Vega receiving the Mohammed Bin Rashid Medal of Scientific Distinguishment for her contributions in clean energy and sustainable products IMAGE: MBR Academy of Scientists

Not everyone has the privilege of going to work every day to do what they love. But Vega knew from a very early age that science was her path.
And her path began in Seville, Spain, studying physics.

In a program with only 10 percent women, Vega says it didn’t take long before the fact that she was a woman was no longer an issue. Her capabilities spoke for themselves. She ultimately acquired a Ph.D. in physics and 30 years of experience in research, teaching, innovation and strategy in chemical engineering and materials science on three continents.

She has published over 230 papers in top journals, has 10 commercialized products, and six patents. She is known for applying fundamental science to the living world focused on clean energy and sustainable products, carbon capture and utilization, sustainable fuels, sustainable cooling systems and water treatment.

Vega has been recognized globally. She was selected in 2024 as one of the 60 impactful women in the Middle East driving sustainability and one of the top 100 Women Leaders in Spain. In 2020 she was awarded the Mohammed Bin Rashid Medal of Scientific Distinguishment for her clean-energy contributions. And this is only a handful of honors.

CAPTION: Lourdes Vega with postdoctoral students at Khalifa University IMAGE: Khalifa University

Representation matters, and for Vega, that means taking any opportunity to inspire and mentor young women. “I try to engage at all levels, first with the people next to me — undergraduate and graduate students — (and) with those collaborating with me — graduate students, postdocs, faculty and colleagues,” she says. Vega also worked in the UAE with the Spanish embassy and the Association of Scientists and Researchers on Women Have the Formula, highlighting the role of women in science.

To young women considering a career in STEM, Vega says, “believe in yourselves. Difficulties should not stop you from pursuing your dreams of being scientists. Even though there are difficulties there are always opportunities ahead and people willing to help and support. Work hard and be resilient. Science is not an easy profession but we can contribute to improving the quality of life of our people and also leave a better planet.”

HESSA EBRAHIM ALI MEJLAD ALFALAHI

“I believe that in our region (the Middle East), female scientists in STEM play an instrumental role in driving the innovation and science advancement, and I am optimistic that the future will be even brighter,” says Hessa Alfalahi, biomedical engineer, researcher and Ph.D. candidate at Khalifa University.

Alfalahi’s plan to contribute to that brighter future? She’s hoping to gear her research toward those who struggle with neurological and psychiatric disorders.

Early diagnosis and intervention are imperative with neuropsychiatric disorders to improve quality of life and manage complicated symptoms, but many diagnoses, like Parkinson’s, typically come after years of neurodegeneration. Alfalahi wants to get in front of it before it gets to this stage. Her research could also prove valuable for conditions like depression, which, according to the World Health Organization, affects 280 million people globally.

CAPTION: Hessa Alfalahi

She plans to use AI technology and smartphones.

“I aim to leverage AI algorithms for the detection of depression in the wild using smartphone typing data, i.e., the finger kinematics during typing captured as a series of timestamps of key presses and key releases,” she says.

Typing behavior might help detect psychomotor impairment and diagnose depression passively at an early stage, she adds.

She won the L’Oréal UNESCO Women in Science award for her work in 2022.


Alfalahi says taking an active role in science is the key to “mitigating evolving challenges in quality of life and the sustainable development of society.”

Alfalahi shares her research by publishing papers and participating in high-ranking international conferences. But she says she really enjoys interacting with the younger students at Khalifa University, sharing her experiences as she transitioned from student to researcher.

Alfalahi says she is grateful for the inclusive research environment at Khalifa University and hopes to share her vision with the women of the Middle East.

“The time is ripe now to take part in accelerating the research production and innovative solutions in all the scientific disciplines,” she tells KUST Review.

Growing a hydrogen economy

The hydrogen economy, it seems, has forever been on the way. But is the time finally here?

The term was coined by John Bockris in a 1970 speech at the General Motors Technical Center to refer to an infrastructure for delivering hydrogen energy to economic sectors that are hard to decarbonize, such as oil refining and manufacturing steel and cement, as well as fueling long-haul transportation on the ground and in the air.

The appeal of hydrogen as a way to decarbonize these industries is apparent: Hydrogen is renewable; it’s easy on the power grid, produced and stored during times of excess of renewable energy and readily available during peak demand; it can reduce pollution (it generates only heat and water when burned); it can be produced locally from a range of materials; and by 2050 it could provide jobs for up to 30 million people with revenues of U.S.$2.5 trillion a year, according to a report from global management consultant McKinsey.

IMAGE: Unsplash
Productions hubs are key

Establishing hydrogen oases, also called hubs, clusters or valleys, is perhaps the most essential aspect of the UAE hydrogen strategy, says Steve Griffiths, senior vice president of Research and Development at Khalifa University. But balancing supply and demand through production clusters is the most significant challenge in scaling hydrogen, Griffiths says. Read more›››

“Clusters allow for clean hydrogen production to be matched with industrial hydrogen off-takers with minimal need for hydrogen storage and transport, both of which can substantially increase the cost of hydrogen for final use,” he says. “Technologies that are proven, or nearly proven, can be deployed into clusters immediately while research and development efforts continue to improve technologies across the hydrogen value chain.”

Griffiths says he expects the top industries using clean hydrogen through 2030 will be refining, chemicals, iron and steel and, in the UAE, aluminum. “Beyond 2030, continued research and development will enable hydrogen to be commercially viable for extended applications, particularly sustainable aviation fuels and maritime shipping fuels,” Griffiths says.

Research and development activities at Khalifa University may also support the overseas export of hydrogen by ammonia and other, more novel, vectors, he says.

“We established the Research and Innovation Center on CO2 and Hydrogen at Khalifa University to make such future innovations possible. That is, we pursue the cutting edge of hydrogen research while supporting development and implementation projects with partners like ADNOC and Emirates Steel Arkan,” Griffiths says.‹‹‹ Read less

But not much has happened to move the technology toward its long-imagined place as a major player in the world’s energy-transition process. That is, until the past five years or so.

“Hydrogen has been produced for a long time for its use in refineries and fertilizers, and technology has evolved to improve the efficiency of them,” explains Lourdes Vega, director of the Research and Innovation Center on CO2 and Hydrogen (RICH Center) at Khalifa University. “What is different now is the interest for using hydrogen as a long term energy storage technology, combined with renewable energy, and for its use to decarbonize hard to abate sectors. This can be accomplished with low carbon hydrogen or green hydrogen and this is where the technology needs to be improved to reduce its cost.”

As countries, businesses and organizations seek to reach the Paris Agreement target of 1.5 C global warming, attention has turned again to the hydrogen-economy model to solve the problems that so far keep the hydrogen economy at bay: finding a reliable way to balance affordability with low greenhouse-gas emissions into the atmosphere.

Hydrogen is an important factor in most strategies devised by at least 75 countries that are seeking to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, according to a paper from academics at the Polish Academy of Sciences.

Additionally, hydrogen has been identified by the International Renewable Energy Agency as one of six technological avenues to achieve net-zero by 2050.

‘HUGE GROWTH STORY’

Among countries expressing an interest in hydrogen: A U.K. House of Commons committee issued a report in December 2022 on the future of hydrogen in the country. The report concluded that although hydrogen couldn’t be considered a panacea to the U.K.’s energy issues, it would certainly play a major role in sectors of the economy, becoming a “huge growth story” over the next 30 years.

Areas identified as best suited for hydrogen include those that are hard to electrify, such as parts of the rail network or heavy transportation and uses that don’t require extensive refueling networks, such as local bus services. The benefit to bus services, Vega says, is that vehicles can operate longer than those powered by electric batteries.

The sectors most likely to benefit from hydrogen (aside from such traditional areas as refineries, chemicals and fertilizers) are metallurgy, cement and heavy transportation, Vega says. “In addition, hydrogen can be used in the heat and power sector, replacing natural gas, with a huge potential market.” Furthermore, green hydrogen can be used, combined with CO2, to produce synthetic fuels such as methane or methanol, usually called e-methane or e-methanol.

And the United States in 2021 announced that the first program in its Energy Earthshots Initiative, aiming to accelerate advances in clean-energy technology, would focus on hydrogen. The Hydrogen Shot’s goal is to reduce the price of hydrogen by 80 percent to U.S.$1 per kilogram in a decade.

IMAGE: Freepik/Unsplash
A gift from the sea

Green hydrogen is the “cleanest” form of hydrogen, using renewable energy sources to split water into hydrogen and oxygen without any greenhouse-gas emissions. And a group of Australian researchers in early 2023 said they created it from seawater without expensive pre-treatment processes or catalysts. Read more›››

“We have split natural seawater into oxygen and hydrogen with nearly 100 percent efficiency, to produce green hydrogen by electrolysis, using a non-precious and cheap catalyst in a commercial electrolyzer,” University of Adelaide’s Shizhang Qiao says via the university’s newsroom.

The team used seawater as a feedstock without any expensive pre-treatments processes such as reverse osmosis, purification or alkalization, Qiao says. The team in its paper for Nature Energy points to seawater as an “almost infinite resource” for hydrogen generation.

Researchers at Khalifa University led by Faisal Al Marzooqi and TieJun Zhang are also working on techniques to generate hydrogen from industrial wastewater contaminated by heavy metals, wastewater from industrial and domestic laundries and seawater using solar energy.

It’s just a beginning, Al Marzooki cautions. “This research is at its very early stages,” he says. “It may take some time between five to 10 years, if enough resources are given to this area.” ‹‹‹ Read less

That price, as with everything, is critical.

The cost in money — and carbon produced — depends on how that hydrogen is made. (See: “Colors of Hydrogen.”) Greener forms are more expensive and therefore represent a small percentage of total hydrogen currently produced. In fact, most hydrogen produced today is made using fossil fuels (methane) and with no CO2 emissions controls; this “gray hydrogen” accounts for 2 percent of the world’s CO2 emissions. And the International Energy Agency predicts fossil fuels will remain the primary source of hydrogen for the United States, Europe and Japan through 2050.

Vega, however, has a more optimistic view, seeing sectors transition from gray to more blue and blue and green as technologies advance and costs come down.

UAE HAS PLANS

Fossil fuels are key to the UAE’s plans, announced in January 2022, to control 25 percent of the world’s hydrogen market using natural gas with CO2 capture (blue hydrogen) and green hydrogen. The nation’s Hydrogen Leadership Initiative pursues a research-and-development collaboration across industries, according to the Emirates News Agency, the UAE’s official news service. Targeted markets include Japan, South Korea, Germany and India. Emirates Global Aluminium, one of the largest companies in the UAE, joined the initiative in September 2022.

“The UAE sees hydrogen as a promising fuel for the future to achieve carbon neutrality and the UAE Net Zero by 2050 Strategic Initiative. Such partnerships will help accelerate the transition to clean and renewable energy,” UAE Minister of Energy and Infrastructure HE Suhail bin Mohammed Al Mazrouei says.

By 2031, according to the Ministry of Energy & Infrastructure’s UAE Energy Strategy 2050, updated in July 2023, the country plans to:

  • Develop a resilient hydrogen supply chain to support the growth of the local industry
  • Consolidate the UAE’s role as a leading global producer and supplier of low-carbon hydrogen
  • Promote innovation in industrial zones in the UAE
  • And establish a robust hydrogen economy that can support the country’s nationwide decarbonization efforts

Meanwhile, UAE Undersecretary for Energy and Petroleum Affairs H.E. Sharif Al Olama tells Reuters that the country plans to produce 1.4 million tons of hydrogen annually by 2031.

Of that number, UAE clean energy company Masdar is expected to produce 1 million tons of green hydrogen by 2031. The remaining 0.4 million tons will be blue hydrogen, produced using natural gas accompanied by CO2 capture and storage.

IMAGE: Unsplash
Decarbonizing diesel engines

Heavy industry emits about 6 billion tons of CO2 a year, about a sixth of the world’s total output. But a diesel-hydrogen engine from Australia nicknamed “baby number two” could help bring that number down. Read more›››

Engineers at the University of New South Wales say they’ve modified a conventional diesel engine to work on hydrogen and a small amount of diesel, reducing C02 emissions by more than 85 percent.

The key, Shawn Kook tells BBC.com, is to introduce the hydrogen into the fuel mix at the right moment. Otherwise, “it will create something that is explosive that will burn out the whole system.”

The team says diesel trucks and equipment in such industries as mining and agriculture could be retrofitted with the technology relatively quickly.‹‹‹ Read less

Al Olama tells the news agency that the 2031 goals include two “hydrogen oases” or production hubs, located in Ruwais and the Khalifa Industrial Zone Abu Dhabi (KIZAD). There will be five hubs by 2050, he says. This follows the Paris Mission Innovation on Clean Hydrogen’s suggestions to promote hydrogen valleys.

The UAE’s plans for at least a partial fossil-fuels-based hydrogen future seem to align with the low-carbon hydrogen developments that Daryl Wilson, executive director of Belgium-based advisory board the Hydrogen Council, says he expects to see across the globe.

“By low-carbon (hydrogen), we mean fossil-fuel-derived hydrogen with carbon capture and storage. Low-carbon hydrogen will be faster, cheaper and quicker to scale than renewable sources in regions such as North Africa,” says Wilson, whose group is made up of 132 energy, transport, industry and investment companies with an interest in building the hydrogen economy.

BUILDING AN INFRASTRUCTURE

Infrastructure for the hydrogen economy, however, is still in its early stages, Wilson says, adding that disruptions in energy markets brought by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have accelerated regional connection from North Africa to Europe.

“Already pipeline corridors have been proposed with an EU backbone, and routes through the Iberian Peninsula and north through Italy. Port terminal infrastructure is under development as we contemplate moving large quantities of hydrogen and its derivatives from sources in Australia to Japan and Korea,” he tells KUST Review.

Vega, however, sees the changes coming more as a result of accelerating consciousness about the need for independent energy sources that can be produced using local resources in a sustainable manner.

But while materials may be new, the infrastructure will be similar to what the energy industry has used in the past. And that’s good news, says the Hydrogen Council’s Wilson.

The policies should apply on a more global level to truly develop and implement the hydrogen economy. Clear policies will help investors and hence, industry to move.

Lourdes Vega


“Ammonia, e-kerosene and methanol will make a contribution as carriers with seaborne trade. From a technical point of view, there are many points of commonality with natural-gas-pipeline development, (liquefied natural gas) cryogenic transport and bulk carrier development for the sea,” Wilson says. “The scale in hydrogen is new ground, but the underlying engineering is not new to industry.”

Well, yes and no, says KU’s Vega.

“Hydrogen and natural gas are both known to industry, but they are not exactly the same, neither the technologies and infrastructure to produce, transportation and storage,” she says.

Governments, however, play a critical role in developing the hydrogen future, Wilson says, “funding the green premium during the transition, providing a clear stable policy regime to support long-term investment decisions, and developing the tradable standards platforms.”

Development goes even beyond individual countries, Vega adds. “The policies should apply on a more global level to truly develop and implement the hydrogen economy. Clear policies will help investors and hence, industry to move.”

And when that hydrogen future finally arrives, it might not be visible to members of the public, who may ride on hydrogen-fueled buses oblivious to the infrastructure that supports them. But “they will experience the benefit of long-term stable cost and security of supply from local renewable energy sources – a very different feeling than the vulnerable uncertainty of our current sources of fossil-fuel energy,” Wilson says.