澳大利亚昆士兰大学纳米科学主席、邹进教授,应邀来校进行学术访问并做学术报告,欢迎大家参加!
报告人:邹进教授
报告题目:Impact of catalysts in the growth of epitaxial III-V semiconductor nanowires
报告时间:7月5日(星期二)上午10:00
报告地点:格致楼5004报告厅
Abstract:
III-V semiconductor nanowires and their heterostructures have been paid extraordinary attention in recent years due to their unique structural and chemical characteristics and in turn potential properties in optoelectronic, nanoelectronic, and sensing developments. In general, semiconductor nanowires are induced by catalysts, which mediates the one-dimensional growth. However, since the complications of catalysts in inducing the nanowire growth, many nanowires induced by the catalysts have their own structural characteristics. In this presentation, I shall summarize our discoveries of impact of catalysts in the growth of epitaxial III-V semiconductor nanowires for the past decade
邹进教授简历
Professor Jin Zou is currently the Chair of Nanoscience in the University of Queensland, he gained his BSc (1982) and MEng (1985) from the University of Science and Technology, Beijing. Under supervision by Professor K H Kuo and F. H. Li (both were academia of Chinese Academy of Sciences), he entered the field of electron microscopy. From 1985, Professor Zou helped to establish the Beijing Laboratory of Electron Microscopy, which has been the flagship electron microscopy laboratory in China. In 1989, Professor Zou went to Sydney University to earn his PhD under the supervision of Professor D. J. H. Cockayne (a world leader in electron microscopy and was a FRS fellow). From then, Professor Zou has been engaged his research in understanding the semiconductor nanostructures using electron microscopy. He gained a PhD with Materials Physics Major in 1993 from Sydney University and worked there for 10 years with various prestigious fellowships, including an Australian Government?s Queen Elizabeth fellowship. In the second half of 2003, Professor Zou moved to the University of Queensland and continued his research is the field of semiconductor nanostructures, where advanced electron microscopy is an essential tool. In 2009, he has been awarded an Australian Government?s Future Fellowship. Over the years, Professor Zou published over 560 SCI articles, which have attracted over 12,700 citations and led to a H-index of 55.