Full-Time

Material Technology and Energy Scientist

Deadline 6/21/26
Savannah River National Laboratory

Savannah River National Laboratory

501-1,000 employees

Applied research and development for DOE

No salary listed

No H1B Sponsorship

North Augusta, SC, USA

In Person

US Citizenship Required

Category
Software Engineering (1)
Required Skills
Metallurgy
Requirements
  • Bachelor’s, Master’s, or Ph.D. in a relevant scientific or engineering discipline (e.g., materials science, mechanical engineering, chemical engineering, metallurgy, physics, chemistry, energy engineering)
  • Demonstrated ability to conduct materials research, laboratory experimentation, computational analysis, or applied engineering work
  • Strong analytical, problem-solving, and data interpretation skills
  • Effective written and verbal communication abilities
  • Ability to work effectively within diverse, multidisciplinary teams
  • Commitment to SRNL’s strong safety culture and rigorous operational standards
  • Ability to obtain and maintain a DOE security clearance for which U.S. citizenship is legally required
Desired Qualifications
  • Experience in materials characterization (e.g., microscopy, spectroscopy, mechanical testing), corrosion science, additive manufacturing, hydrogen materials interactions, or energy system development
  • Familiarity with modeling and simulation tools, data analytics, finite element analysis, or materials informatics
  • Experience in DOE laboratory environments, national security programs, or highly regulated technical facilities
  • Record of technical publications, patents, or significant contributions to R&D projects
  • Experience with project leadership, proposal writing, or technical integration across disciplines
  • Conduct research, experiments, modeling, or engineering design related to materials characterization, materials performance, corrosion, energy systems, or applied materials science
  • Develop and evaluate advanced materials, coatings, manufacturing processes, or energy technologies aligned with SRNL’s mission in national security, clean energy, and environmental stewardship
  • Perform laboratory studies, computational analyses, mechanical testing, thermal evaluations, or chemical/materials assessments to support technology development and qualification
  • Collect, interpret, and document technical data in reports, presentations, and publications for internal teams, external collaborators, and DOE sponsors
  • Collaborate with multidisciplinary teams including materials scientists, chemists, engineers, modelers, and operations personnel
  • Support scale-up, prototyping, and field demonstration of emerging materials technologies or energy systems
  • Ensure all work is executed safely and in accordance with SRNL, DOE, and regulatory requirements
  • Participate in proposal development, strategic planning, and sponsor engagement to grow SRNL’s materials and energy research portfolio
  • Maintain current knowledge of emerging materials technologies, new analytical tools, manufacturing innovations, and energy system advancements relevant to division missions
Savannah River National Laboratory

Savannah River National Laboratory

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SRNL is an applied research and development facility for the U.S. Department of Energy, focusing on practical, technology-based solutions in three main areas: national security, environmental stewardship, and energy resilience. It conducts research and develops technologies for environmental remediation, legacy waste management, safe disposition of nuclear materials (including vitrification), hydrogen technologies, advanced manufacturing, cybersecurity, materials science, and nonproliferation. Its work supports federal government agencies such as the DOE and NNSA, and its operations are led by the Battelle Savannah River Alliance with partners like Georgia Tech and the University of South Carolina. Products and services come in the form of research programs, technology development, and deployment to address national challenges, including maintaining the nuclear deterrent, reducing nuclear threats, and enabling safe, resilient energy systems.

Company Size

501-1,000

Company Stage

N/A

Total Funding

N/A

Headquarters

Town of Yorktown, New York

Founded

1951

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • CRAFT partnerships with UT Austin and LLNL boost manufacturing applications.
  • Dr. Johney Green Jr. enhances energy resilience from January 2025.
  • Advanced Manufacturing Collaborative accelerates CRAFT commercialization.

What critics are saying

  • DOE cuts slash SRNL's $400M budget in 2026 fiscal year.
  • Fluor-led SRNS wins BSRA contract in 2027 recompete.
  • INL seizes SRNL's $50M NNSA hydrogen contracts in 2026.

What makes Savannah River National Laboratory unique

  • SRNL invented CRAFT technology for light-controlled 3D printing crystallinity.
  • SRNL leads vitrification for DOE nuclear waste remediation.
  • SRNL founded South Carolina Hydrogen & Fuel Cell Alliance.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

Paid Vacation

Paid Holidays

Flexible Work Hours

Remote Work Options

Hybrid Work Options

Wellness Program

Mental Health Support

Phone/Internet Stipend

Company News

Department of Energy
Mar 17th, 2026
SRNL and partners advance 3D printing with new CRAFT technology.

SRNL and partners advance 3D printing with new CRAFT technology. Savannah River National Laboratory researchers, along with university and other national laboratory partners, invented a new technology that uses light to fine-tune material properties such as strength, flexibility and durability during the 3-D printing process. March 17, 2026 March 17, 2026 3 min minute read time Digital images of Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa were used to create printed copies where the shades of gray represent different levels of crystallinity, showing how the CRAFT method can precisely control a material's physical properties. Credit: Sandia National Laboratories. Breakthrough research enables precise control of material properties during manufacturing. AIKEN, S.C. - Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) researchers, along with university and other national laboratory partners, invented a new technology that uses light to fine-tune material properties such as strength, flexibility and durability during the 3-D printing process. Typically, 3D printed parts share the same set of characteristics throughout. "We've never had this level of control over these materials before," said Sam Leguizamon, SRNL researcher and project lead for the technology, called CRAFT, or Lithographic Crystallinity Regulation in Additive Fabrication of Thermoplastics. "Being able to direct how polymers form during printing gives us a powerful new tool not just for manufacturing, but for advancing the entire field of polymer science." Using the CRAFT method, a soft-bodied turtle was 3D printed with varying degrees of flexibility and physical properties. Credit: Sandia National Laboratories. SRNL, the sole national laboratory sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Environmental Management, hopes to leverage its new Advanced Manufacturing Collaborative facility to further develop CRAFT and other related additive manufacturing technologies alongside academic and industry partners. Leguizamon played a pivotal role in uncovering the groundbreaking science behind CRAFT during his tenure at Sandia National Laboratories. There, his team made a remarkable discovery: by changing light intensity during printing, they could produce materials with varying levels of clarity. Looking deeper, Leguizamon found that these changes in clarity align with shifts in the material's molecular structure, which normally required chemical methods or high-temperature processing. Leguizamon continued his work on the CRAFT project after arriving at SRNL. He drafted a clear narrative to refine CRAFT's mechanics and to optimize the process. He also formed partnerships with the University of Texas at Austin, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories. "CRAFT represents a shift in how we think about manufacturing plastic parts," said Patrick Garcia, SRNL associate lab director. "Instead of accepting materials as they come off the printer, we can now design them with specific material properties for a specific purpose from the very beginning of the process." The University of Texas team recently demonstrated a real-world application of CRAFT by printing a detailed model of a human hand. The printed hand mimics the characteristics of skin, bones, ligaments, and tendons, all using a single material. Models like this could be used to teach medical students or to help develop advanced protective gear. CRAFT offers a new pathway for creating advanced thermoplastics tailored to specific applications. Industries such as aerospace, biomedicine and energy systems could use this technology designed directly into 3D printed parts. This research was supported by the National Nuclear Security Administration Office of Engineering and Technology Maturation, which develops and matures advanced manufacturing capabilities for the nuclear security enterprise. -Contributor: Federica Staton Email Updates To receive the latest news and updates about the Office of Environmental Management, submit your e-mail address.