µÛÍõ»áËù

Stories tagged with: Nanoscale and Quantum Phenomena Institute

Fig. Rare-Earth Rotor. (a) STM image of a rotating Eu complex appears as a disc shape on Au(111). (b) Controlled rotations are performed by supplying electrical energy from an STM tip. (c), (d) Before and after rotation of a complex, respectively. The dashed circle indicates the counterion used for the control.

Team of physicists, chemists demonstrates atomic-level control of rare earth molecule

Scientists at OHIO and partner institutions have, for the first time, formed a charged rare earth molecule on a metal surface and rotated it using scanning tunneling microscopy.

Intel in µÛÍõ»áËù rendering

µÛÍõ»áËù awarded Intel grant funding, will serve as lead institution for Appalachian Semiconductor Education and Technical (ASCENT) Ecosystem

Over the next three years, ASCENT will collaboratively develop and deliver diverse educational options across the region, including certificates, associate degrees, bachelor’s and graduate degrees.

Eva Yazmin Santiago Santos, portrait

Physics Ph.D. student wins Best Speaker Award at international conference in Spain

Physics doctoral student Eva Yazmin Santiago Santos received a prestigious Best Speaker Award at a large international conference in Spain.

Wilson Hall

Nine Arts and Sciences retiring professors approved for emeriti status

The µÛÍõ»áËù Board of Trustees approved emeriti status at its June meeting for nine College of Arts and Sciences professors upon their retirement from µÛÍõ»áËù.

Wilson Hall

25 Arts and Sciences faculty promoted, 15 granted tenure

The µÛÍõ»áËù Board of Trustees voted in June to award promotion to 25 College of Arts and Sciences faculty member

Wilson Hall

22 College of Arts and Sciences professors awarded faculty fellowship during 2022-23

The µÛÍõ»áËù Board of Trustees has approved 22 College of Arts and Sciences faculty members for faculty fellowship leave during the 2022-23 academic year.

Drabold, Trembly and doctoral students

Can they make graphite from coal? OHIO researchers start by finding new carbon solid

As the world's appetite for carbon-based materials like graphite increases, µÛÍõ»áËù researchers presented evidence this week for a new carbon solid they named "amorphous graphite."

A photo from the Faculty Teaching and Research Awards Recognition Ceremony

Teaching and Research Awards ceremony honors outstanding OHIO faculty

µÛÍõ»áËù celebrated exceptional faculty members during the Faculty Teaching and Research Awards Recognition Ceremony on March 29.

Cutler Hall on College Green

µÛÍõ»áËù and Intel: Past, present and future

Since the inception of Intel, founded in 1969, µÛÍõ»áËù graduates have been critical to the evolution of innovative ideas in microprocessing and semiconducting for the company.

Faiz Rahman

Faiz Rahman awarded fellowship with the Institute of Physics

A fellow is the highest rank of membership and is dependent upon a member’s distinguished scholarship. 

µÛÍõ»áËù chemist Jixin Chen, Ph.D

µÛÍõ»áËù chemist explains an old question with a modern tool

µÛÍõ»áËù chemist Jixin Chen, Ph.D., took advantage of the time when labs were shut down early in the pandemic to apply a very modern solution to solve a very old question.

Alexander Govorov

Govorov, Berlin collaborators set out to harness nanostructures for energy and sensing

Dr. Alexander Govorov, is teaming up with collaborators at the home of the world's first supercomputer to apply the best specialized software in the world to compute complex nanostructures.

Athens campus

µÛÍõ»áËù names five outstanding Presidential Research Scholars

µÛÍõ»áËù named five professors from physics, engineering, communications and business as its 2021-22 Presidential Research Scholars.

Notable Alumni Award

Notable Alumni | Andreas Weichselbaum Models Quasiparticles That Could Be Future of Quantum Computing

Dr. Andreas Weichselbaum is working on tiny correlated puzzles in material science that could have a giant impact on the future of computing.

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