Professor Rodney Ruoff - american scientist, a world expert on physical chemistry and nanotechnology - carbon materials and carbon nanostructures such as fullerenes, carbon nanotubes, graphene, diamond. The scientific achievements of Professor Ruoff includes pioneering discoveries in the field of development of new techniques for the synthesis and study physical and chemical properties of novel materials including nanostructures and 2D carbon materials, particularly graphene, diamond, nanotubes, hybrid SP3 and SP2, carbon nanofoam , fullerenes.
Professor 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 in 1988, and he was a Fulbright Fellow in 1988-89 at the Max Planck Institute für Strömungsforschung 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 Lectureship prize.
Professor Rodney Ruoff was guest of Warsaw University of Technology in January 2016, he gave a lecture as part of Scientia SUPREMA and visited the Laboratory of graphene at the Faculty of Chemical and Process Engineering, under the supervision of Professor Stanisław Janeczko and Professor Małgorzata Lewandowska.
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