北京大学纳米科技论坛系列报告之九十八
Graphene and new carbon materials
报告人: Prof. Rodney S. Ruoff
Center for Multidimensional Carbon Materials (CMCM)
Institute for Basic Science Center on the UNIST Campus
Department of Chemistry and School of Materials Science
Ulsan National Institute of Science &Technology (UNIST)
Republic of Korea
地 点:北大化学院化学楼A717学术报告厅
时 间:2015年8月31日(星期一) 下午 2:00
Abstract:
Prof. Rodney S. Ruoff will briefly introduce the Center for Multidimensional Carbon Materials (CMCM), an Institute of Basic Science Center at UNIST. Then, a very brief history of graphene (see, e.g., ref. 1) will be given, after which he will discuss some of the contributions that he and his collaborators have made to graphene science (from 1999 [2,3] until now). He’ll then give a perspective of some new carbon and related materials that might be made in the future.
1. Ruoff, Rodney S. Personal perspectives on graphene: New graphene-related materials on the horizon, MRS Bulletin, 37, 1314-1318 (2012).
Of possible interest:
2. (a) Lu XK, Yu MF, Huang H, and Ruoff RS, Tailoring graphite with the goal of achieving single sheets, Nanotechnology, 10, 269-272 (1999). (b) Lu XK, Huang H, Nemchuk N, and Ruoff RS, Patterning of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite by oxygen plasma etching, Applied Physics Letters, 75, 193-195 (1999).
3. Zhu, Yanwu; Murali, Shanthi; Stoller, Meryl D.; Ganesh, K. J.; Cai, Weiwei; Ferreira, Paulo J.; Pirkle, Adam; Wallace, Robert M.; Cychosz, Katie A.; Thommes, Matthias; Su, Dong; Stach, Eric A.; Ruoff, Rodney S. Carbon-Based Supercapacitors Produced by Activation of Graphene, Science 332, 1537-1541 (2011).
Resume:
Rodney S. Ruoff, Distinguished Professor, UNIST Department of Chemistry and the School of Materials Science and Engineering, is director of the Center for Multidimensional Carbon Materials(CMCM), an IBS Center located at the Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST) campus. Prior to joining UNIST he was the Cockrell Family Regents Endowed Chair Professor at the University of Texas at Austin from September, 2007. He earned his Ph.D. in Chemical Physics from the University of Illinois-Urbana in1988, and he was a Fulbright Fellow in 1988-89 at the Max Planck Institute fürStrömungs for schung in Göttingen, Germany. He was at Northwestern University from January 2000 to August 2007,where he was the John Evans Professor of Nanoengineering and director of NU’s Biologically Inspired Materials Institute. He is a Fellow of the Materials Research Society, the American Physical Society, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and was awarded the 2014 MRS Turnbull Award. His H-factor is 100 (Web of Science).
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