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Washington University in St. Louis News & Information > News Topics > Science & Technology >

Nanotechnology

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Showing Nanotechnology Experts 1 through 9 of 9.
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Richard Axelbaum
 Professor of energy, environmental and chemical engineering

Axelbaum is the Director of the Consortium for Clean Coal Utilization. He also heads the Laboratory for Advanced Combustion and Energy Research and has directed the Engineering section of the NASA Missouri Space Grant Consortium at Washington University in St. Louis since 1997. He served as the associate ...

Expertise: Clean coal, nanoparticles, nanotechnology, materials, synthesis, flames

Direct contact: (314) 935-7560
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rla@wustl.edu

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Pratim Biswas
 Chariman of the Department of Energy, Environmental & Chemical Engineering; the Stifel and Quinette Jens Professor

Biswas received his Ph.D. from California Institute of Technology, has published extensively in his field and served on many international organizations and conferences. His research interests include aerosol science and engineering, nanoparticle technology, air quality engineering, combustion, materials ...

Expertise: aerosol science, nanoparticle technology, air quality engineering, combustion, material processing for environmental technologies, environmentally benign processing, environmental nanotechnology, …

Direct contact: (314) 935-5482
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pratim.biswas@seas.wustl.edu

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William Buhro
 Professor of Chemistry in Arts & Sciences

William H. Buhro, Ph.D., professor of chemistry and associate director of the Center for Materials Innovation, specializes in nanotechnology. He and his group are engaged in synthesis on the nanometer-scale. They design reactions and mechanisms for the growth of inorganic crystals having dimensions ...

Expertise: nanomaterials, materials, inorganic chemistry, nanotubes, nanowires

Direct contact: (314) 935-4269
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buhro@wustl.edu

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Mike Dudukovic
 Laura and William Jens Professor of Enviromental Engineering

Mike Dudukovic, Ph.D., is the Laura & William Jens Professor of Environmental Engineering and director of the Chemical Engineering Reaction Laboratory (CREL). His primary interest is in chemical reaction engineering involving kinetic-transport interactions in multiphase systems. His research group ...

Expertise: chemical reaction engineering, kinetic transport interactions, fluid dynamic studies, transport studies, computational fluid dynamic, catalytic distillation, photochemical reactive distillation, …

Direct contact: (314) 935-6021
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dudu@wustl.edu

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Kenneth F. Kelton
 Professor of Physics in Arts & Sciences

Kenneth Kelton is an expert in a phenomenon called nucleation, which is the most common way that physical systems change from one phase to another and is a governing process in nearly all phase transformations. Kelton has a long history of collaboration with Patrick Gibbons, Ph.D., professor of physics ...

Expertise: quasicrystals, metallurgy, nucleation processes, metallic liquids, materials science, materials physics, non-crystaline solids, …

Direct contact: (314) 935-6228
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kfk@wuphys.wustl.edu

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John McCarthy
 Professor of Mathematics

John McCarthy's field is a kind of analysis called operator theory, which he defines as the study of matrices in infinite dimensional space. It is most directly linked to quantum mechanics, a physics theory involving elementary particles such as the electron that predicts the outcomes of physical ...

Expertise: mathematics, pure mathematics, operator theory, quantum mechanics

Direct contact: (314) 935-6753
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mccarthy@wustl.edu

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James S. Schilling
 Professor of physics in Arts & Sciences

The primary thrust of the research in Professor Schilling's group is to study the influence of high hydrostatic pressure on the superconducting, magnetic and structural properties of exotic condensed matter systems.

Expertise: high-pressure physics, high-temperature superconductors, high hydrostatic pressure, exotic condensed matter systems, diamond anvil cell, europium metal

Direct contact: 314-935-6239
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jss@wuphys.wustl.edu

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Stuart A. Solin
 Hohenberg Professor of Experimental Physics in Arts & Sciences

A leading figure in condensed matter physics and materials science, Solin's research focus is in fundamental physical phenomena in ordered solids, such as diamonds, and disordered solids, such as window glass. His contributions to the advancement of physics include the development of a number of experimental ...

Expertise: fundamental physical phenomena, x-ray physics, high-pressure physics, mesoscopic physics, nanoscopic physics, femtosecond, phase tranformations, …

Direct contact: (314) 935-5605
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solin@wuphys.wustl.edu

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Younan Xia
 The James M. McKelvey Professor

The Xia research group pursues cutting-edge research in three major frontiers: nanotechnology, materials chemistry, and biomaterials. His research interests include synthesis of nanomaterials, bio-material interface, energy conversion and storage, drug delivery, as well as neural and tissue engineering. ...

Expertise: Nanotechnology, materials chemistry, biomaterials, imaging.

Direct contact: Work: (314) 935-8328
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xia@biomed.wustl.edu

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