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Martijn Kemerink Guest Editor for this issue of MRS Bulletin Technical University Eindhoven, The Netherlands; email [email protected]. Kemerink is an associate professor of organic electronics at the Eindhoven University of Technology. His research focuses on charge and energy transport in organic materials and devices, combining electrical characterization with scanning probe microscopy and numerical modeling. Investigated devices include light-emitting electrochemical cells, ratchets, field-effect transistors, memories, and solar cells. Thomas M. Arruda Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, Oak Ridge, TN, USA; tel. 865-576-0176; and email [email protected]. Arruda is currently a postdoctoral researcher in the Imaging Functionality group at Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences. He received his BS degree in chemistry from the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, in 2004, and his PhD degree in chemistry from Northeastern University in 2010, where he employed synchrotron-based methods to study the stability and activity of electrocatalysts for PEM fuel cells. His research focuses on SPM-based approaches to study ion transport and electrochemical reactions in materials for Li-ion and Li-air batteries. Additionally, Arruda has been working on adapting strain-based SPM methods to study carbonaceous-based electrochemical capacitors. Flemming Besenbacher Interdisciplinary Nanoscience Center, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Aarhus University, Denmark; tel. 45-23382204; and email [email protected]. Besenbacher is a full professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the Faculty of Science, Aarhus University, Denmark. He received his doctoral degree in natural sciences from Aarhus University. He is director and founder of the Interdisciplinary Nanoscience Center and head of the graduate school. Besenbacher is a member of the board of directors of the Carlsberg Foundation, the Carlsberg Breweries A/S, and of the Tuborg Foundation. He has received numerous honors, and he is a fellow of the Chinese Chemical Society, the American Vacuum Society, and the Materials Research Society, and received an honorary Einstein Professorship at the Chinese Academy of Sciences. He has published more than 500 papers in international journals and several in high-impact journals. Louisa M. Brown Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA; tel. 607254-4685; and email [email protected]. Brown is a graduate student in the Marohn Laboratory at Cornell University. She received a BA degree in chemistry and fine arts from Hamilton College in 2009, where she performed undergraduate research with Professors Karen Brewer and Ian Rosenstein. In 2010, she was awarded an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship. Her current research includes scanned-probe microscopy techniques to study local electronic effects such as charge generation and charge trapping in organic semiconductors and photovoltaics, with a particular interest in understanding degradation processes.
DOI: 10.1557/mrs.2012.148
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