MRS Bulletin volume organizers guide technical theme topics for 2013
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(Young Scientist) Award, and Purdue University's Faculty Scholar and Early Career Research Excellence Awards. He is the author of over 150 peer-reviewed publications, and has given over 100 invited presentations at conferences and university, corporate, and national laboratories. Ting Xu is an assistant professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering and the Department of Chemistry at the University of California– Berkeley. She is interested in generating hierarchically structured functional materials using directed selfassembly. Her current focus is to develop fundamental understanding of the principles governing multi-length scale assemblies in multiple component systems including polymers, nanopar-
MRS Bulletin volume organizers guide technical theme topics for 2013 www.mrs.org/bulletin
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he MRS Bulletin 2013 volume organizers, who will guide the development of theme topics for the 2013 volume year, are Mark T. Lusk (Colorado School of Mines), Eva Olsson (Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden), Birgit Schwenzer (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory), and James W. Stasiak (Hewlett-Packard). Requests for instructions on submitting proposals for MRS Bulletin theme topics can be emailed to [email protected]. Mark T. Lusk is a Professor of Physics at the Colorado School of Mines and is the director of the Golden Energy Computing Organization. His research focuses on many-body computational inquiries of quantum transport in novel organic and inorganic nanostructured assem-
blies. He studied solid-state physics at the U.S. Naval Academy and was subsequently a naval nuclear engineer. After receiving an MS degree in electrical engineering at Colorado State University, he obtained a PhD degree in applied mechanics at the California Institute of Technology. He has been a professor at the Colorado School of Mines for 16 years. Eva Olsson is Professor of Experimental Physics at Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden, the head of the Division of Microscopy and MiMRS BULLETIN
ticles, small molecules, and peptides. Xu received her MS degree from Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1999, and her PhD degree from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, in 2004. She was a joint postdoctoral fellow of the University of Pennsylvania and the Cold Neutron for Biology and Technology team at the National Institute of Standards and Technology from 2004 to 2006. In 2007, she joined UC-Berkeley. Xu has co-authored over 40 peer-reviewed articles in archival journals, conference proceedings, and book chapters and given over 60 invited talks. She was the recipient of the MRS Graduate Student Silver Award in 2003, 2008 3M Nontenured Faculty Award, 2008 DuPont Young Professor Award, 2009 ONR-Young Investigator Award, 2010 Li Ka Shing Woman Research Award, 2011 Camille-Dreyfus ScholarTeacher Award, and 2011 ACS Arthur K. Doolittle Award. She was named as one of “Brilliant 10” by Popular Science magazine in 2009.
croanalysis, the director of the center for Material An
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