
A.J. Simon
Head of Industrial Decarbonization
Carbon Utilization + Hydrogen
Our scientists will guide your organization to achieve its climate goals with the right carbon management program.
A.J. translates scientific and engineering expertise into actionable strategies for client organizations seeking permanent carbon removal.
A.J. Simon is a mechanical engineer and energy systems expert, whose passion for efficiency and insatiable curiosity has led to a 20+ year career spanning industry, academia and the U.S. Department of Energy.
Prior to joining Carbon Direct, he managed the Energy Group at Lawrence Livermore National Lab where he led assessments of technologies as diverse as carbon capture and removal, the energy-water nexus, nuclear energy, hydrogen fuel, building energy efficiency, and soldier-portable power.
From 2003 to 2008, he helped to manage a large portfolio of university-led clean energy research at Stanford's Global Climate and Energy Project. From 2001 to 2003, he developed combustion and emissions control technologies for General Electric's diesel and gas turbine product lines.
Education
MS, Mechanical Engineering
Stanford University
BS, Mechanical Engineering
Stanford University
Awards
Oppenheimer Science and Energy Fellow (2018)
Department of Energy
Secretary’s Honor Award (2016)
Department of Energy
Scientific Editor for Science & Technology Review (2013)
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Centennial Teaching Assistant (2000)
Stanford University
Dr. Antoniuk-Pablant is a research scientist focusing on carbon capture and utilization, as well as solar energy harvesting. Her expertise spans organic chemistry, analytical chemistry, chemical engineering, materials science, photochemistry, electrochemistry, and bio-electrochemistry.
Dr. Antoniuk-Pablant received her BS from UC Santa Cruz in Chemistry with a focus on environmental chemistry, and subsequently worked in three analytical chemistry labs at the university. She received her PhD in Organic Chemistry from Arizona State University in 2015, where she designed, synthesized, characterized, and studied organic dyes for research on dye sensitized solar cells. She did her postdoctoral studies at Stanford University where she investigated new methods for converting CO2 to useful chemicals or fuels though developing new platforms for combing electrochemical CO2 reduction and microbial metabolism.
Education
PhD, Organic Chemistry
Arizona State University
BS, Chemistry
University of California, Santa Cruz