Haegel is originally from New Haven, Connecticut, but grew up in Ohio, where her father and mother worked as an accountant and Latin teacher, respectively.[2]
She studied materials science and engineering at the University of Notre Dame, graduating as co-valedictorian.[3] She continued the study of materials science and engineering as a graduate student at the University of California, Berkeley, supported by an NSF Graduate Fellowship, performing her research under the direction of Prof. Eugene Haller at the nearby Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.[2] Earning a master's degree along the way,[3] she completed her Ph.D. at Berkeley in 1985, and became a postdoctoral researcher at the Siemens Research Laboratory in Germany.[2]
In 2017, Haegel was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS), after a nomination from the APS Topical Group on Energy Research and Applications, "for advances in the characterization and understanding of advanced semiconductor materials for clean energy, international space astronomy, and national security; and for inspiring and developing the next generation of scientific leaders through physics education and research".[4] She is also a Humboldt Fellow, a Fulbright Scholar, and a Kellogg Foundation Fellow.[1]
References
^ abc"Nancy Haegel", Staff, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, retrieved 2021-08-07