Martin Harmer, director of the Center for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology
(CAMN) at Lehigh University, has been awarded a Humboldt Research Award for
senior scientists by Germany's Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.
The international honor, one of the most prestigious
given by Germany, recognizes Harmer's lifetime research
achievements in materials science and engineering.
Harmer, a professor of materials science and engineering
at Lehigh, is world-renowned for his studies of the
properties of structural and electronic ceramic materials
and their control at the micro- and nanoscale. He
is particularly interested in developing novel transparent
materials and nanomaterials with multi-functional
properties. Currently, he is studying the sintering
behavior of nanoparticles of gold and iron oxide,
and the mechanism of the conversion of polycrystalline
alumina into single crystal sapphire for lighting
applications.
As director of Lehigh's CAMN, Harmer leads a variety
of projects. In one, a multi-disciplinary team of
Lehigh researchers is working with peers from Harvard,
Rice, Georgia Tech, UCLA and the Illinois Institute
of Technology to study the economic and environmental
impact of nanotechnology. The project is supported
by a five-year, $1.7- million grant from the Nanoscale
Science and Engineering Center of the National Science
Foundation.
"The real power of nano is evident when it supports
discovery and innovation in other areas – areas such
as medicine, computing, materials, and environmental
engineering," says Harmer.
Lehigh has one of the top electron microscopy centers
in the U.S., Harmer notes, and has for more than
30 years hosted the world's foremost annual microscopy
short courses.
"Our facilities provide us with unmatched capability
in nanocharacterization, " he says. "But it is when
these facilities support adjacent research interests – the
search for more effective methods to target drugs
directly at tumors, the efforts to remove harmful
pollutants from ground water – that the possibilities
and significance of nanoscale engineering really
take shape."
The Humboldt Award, which is worth about $60,000,
will fund Harmer's research into the basic science
of novel heat treatment (sintering) processes for
growing new types of single crystal and multilayer
ceramic materials with enhanced performance characteristics
for applications such as laser lighting, medical
ultrasound imaging and more efficient diesel engines.
The Humboldt Research Award for senior scientists
is presented each year to a maximum of 100 top international
researchers in engineering, humanities and the natural
and physical sciences. It enables foreign academics
to conduct research at German research institutions
with researchers from Germany and from the rest of
the world. Recipients are nominated by leading German
scholars and have five years to use the award.
The Humboldt Research Award for senior scientists
is presented each year to a maximum of 100 top international
researchers in engineering, humanities and the natural
and physical sciences. It enables foreign academics
to conduct research at German research institutions
with researchers from Germany and from the rest of
the world. Recipients are nominated by leading German
scholars and have five years to use the award.
There are currently five Humboldt senior scientist
research award winners from the field of materials
science visiting Germany, including Prof. Anthony
Evans from the University of California at Santa
Barbara and Prof. Hamish Fraser from Ohio State University.
Harmer will use his award to collaborate with Prof.
Jurgen Roedel at the University of Darmstadt, with
Prof. Michael Hoffman at the University of Karlsruhe
and Prof. Manfred Ruhle at the Max Planck Institute
in Stuttgart.
Harmer,
a fellow of the American Ceramic Society and a
member of the European Academy of Sciences, was
awarded the Sc. D. from Leeds University (England)
in recognition of lifetime contributions to science.
He has published more than 200 articles and has been
cited more than 2,000 times in articles by other
researchers. In 2002, he was named a "Highly Cited
Researcher" by the Institute for Scientific Information.
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