Thank you, Melanie, and thank you all for joining us. We accomplished a lot in the third quarter and I'm excited to share our progress with you today. A major highlight of the quarter was the US Department of Energy's announcement that we were selected to negotiate a $50 million grant for a project focused on continuous production of sulfide-based solid electrolyte materials for advanced all solid-state batteries or ASSBs. The process was highly competitive and we view our selection as a validation of our technology and business model. We thank the DOE for its faith in Solid Power. Wide adoption of EVs in the United States will require continued advancement of battery technologies, including the materials that support that advancement. We believe our sulfide cell and electrolyte can offer a step function increase in battery performance compared to conventional lithium-ion. While performance is critical so is the ability to efficiently manufacture and process our product. As we continue to innovate on electrolyte performance, based on feedback from partners and potential customers, we also need to demonstrate that our electrolyte can be manufactured on a high-volume and high-quality basis. To do so, we will need to shift from our current batch production to a continuous manufacturing process. Over the next 12 to 18 months, the team is planning to install the first globally known pilot line that can continuously manufacture sulfide-based cell and electrolyte materials for ASSBs. The first pilot line we are planning to install has been part of our overall electrolyte technology development road map. We expect that by using a continuous manufacturing process, we will have better control of the final electrolyte product and a greater ability to tailor our electrolyte to a customer's requirements. As an added benefit, following Phase 1 of the project we expect to be able to produce 75 metric tons of electrolyte per year to support our customer development programs. Our projection is that Phase 1 will be completed in 2026. After finishing the full project projected to be in 2028, we expect to have the capability to produce 140 metric tons per year at SP2, which is more than four times our current capability. Last month, shortly following the DOE's announcement, we hosted Colorado Governor, Jared Polis; and Deputy Secretary of the Department of Energy, David Turk. We gave them a tour of our electrolyte facility and showed them how we plan to deploy the DOE funds in a continuous manufacturing process. Deputy Secretary David Turk spoke about the DOE's rigorous selection process and the criteria used to select companies for grants. Solid Power satisfied their three main criteria: first having a strong technology and business model; second addressing challenges in the US supply chain for clean energy by producing battery cells domestically; and third improving our surrounding communities by hiring locally to staff this project. We're thrilled to have the validation and support of the federal government and our local community here in Thornton and look forward to undergoing negotiations for the grant. The next step in the DOE process will be to negotiate a contract for the grant funding. We expect that will take several months and we will provide updates when we are able to. Another highlight of the quarter was beginning development activities in our state-of-the-art electrolyte Innovation Center or EIC. The EIC was designed to significantly enhance our research and development capabilities, and improve pre-pilot electrolyte manufacturing processes. The EIC will allow us to focus on smaller scale electrolyte development and pre-pilot manufacturing processes, before transferring our processes to pilot scale manufacturing. The EIC will enable speed and flexibility, emulating a full process on a smaller scale. The work we do in the EIC will help us customize electrolyte for customers' needs and enhance our feedback loop between our electrolyte and cell development programs. This pre-pilot continuous flow process and equipment development will also be a precursor to the work we expect to do under the BIL grant and increase our confidence in executing that program. I'm very excited about the potential EIC gives us, as we continue to position Solid Power as a leader in the sulfide electrolyte space. Moving on to electrolyte sampling. We continue to sample multiple customers on a repeat basis. with multiple variants and we have received constructive feedback. As we iterate our products, we believe we are well positioned to react quickly to our customers' requirements. While the total addressable market is large, the number of customers within is finite. As we have said before, we believe many EV OEMs and Tier 1 battery producers have sulfide-based solid-state products in their future road map. Of this group, we are now actively sampling a substantial portion. The feedback from sampling is providing important learnings as we continue to evolve our technology. And as I mentioned with our new EIC, we can rapidly adapt and adjust to meet their needs. On the cell side, we've made significant progress on our A-2 cell design this year. In order to address gaps, we identified with the A-1 design the team has been hard at work to improve the design of our cathode anode and separator for the A-2. These are not major chemistry changes. Rather, we are tweaking and enhancing the current design in our pursuit of higher performance. In addition, the team has made some mechanical improvements to the lines with the goal of higher quality cell builds. The work is continuing on these efforts and I believe they will provide notable improvements from our A-1 design especially around safety and energy density. We have begun small production runs of our A-2 material set for internal testing and expect to begin testing A-2 cells in early 2025. As I segue to our progress with partners, I want to note two things I am excited about. First, the feedback loop we have created is fueling our technology development with sampling and customer response as key components. Second, our cell technology will soon be in development on three continents through our work with BMW in Europe and SK On in Asia, broadening our reach and depth of experience globally. With BMW in the third quarter, we finalized the JDA extension as we continue to collaborate with them on cell development and manufacturing. The overall goal of the JDA remains what it has always been to develop a competitive solid-state battery technology that can be used in an automotive application. We continue to drive performance around A-2 and our overall road map to achieve a product that meets BMW's exacting standards prior to vehicle integration. We are laser-focused on continuing to develop our cell technologies prior to BMW bringing online its pilot line in Parsdorf Germany next year. We value our partnership with BMW and continue to enjoy the collaborative nature and beneficial feedback loop. With SK On we remain on track with our agreements and have already met all of the required milestones for the year. The line drop and tech transfer are going well and we expect to send electrolyte to Korea this quarter to support factory acceptance activities ahead of planned line installation in mid-2025. Additionally, during the third quarter we signed a non-binding MoU with a major battery manufacturer to explore the possibility of an electrolyte JDA. While it is very early in this engagement if we successfully advance to an agreement it would be our first electrolyte-specific JDA. We expect such a collaboration would give us as valuable feedback and insights into the electrolyte design and development. We are continuing to deepen relationships across Korean battery landscape by collaborating with Korean research institutes such as Korea Electronics Technology Institute and Korea Evaluation Institute of Industrial Technology. We have entered into several agreements to leverage the Korean ecosphere on materials and battery performance and are excited by what we can learn from these new relationships. We expect these collaborations to advance our understanding of market needs while expanding our network in Korea as we benefit from the talent and experience of these leading institutions. Overall I'm pleased with the progress in the third quarter and excited about our momentum as we exit the year and move into 2025. I will now turn the call over to Linda to review our financials. Linda?