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Yuanbo Zhang

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yuanbo Zhang is a condensed matter physicist and a professor of physics at Fudan University. He is known for his work on the electronic properties of low-dimensional systems.[1]

Education and career

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He studied physics at Peking University and earned his bachelor's degree in 2000, and a doctorate at Columbia University in 2006 under the supervision of Philip Kim, they work on graphene almost at the same time with Geim and Novoselov.[2][3] Zhang worked at the University of California, Berkeley as a Miller Research Fellow until 2009,[4] when he joined the faculty at Fudan University. He joined the faculty at Fudan University in 2009.[5]

Awards and honours

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Zhang won the IUPAP(International Union of Pure and Applied Physics) Young Scientist Prize (C8), in 2010.[6] He was awarded the second Nishina Asia award for "his outstanding contributions to the elucidation of electronic properties of monolayer and bilayer graphene."[7]

References

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  1. ^ "Yuanbo Zhang group". Fudan University.
  2. ^ Reich, Eugenie Samuel (2010). "Nobel prize committee under fire". Nature. doi:10.1038/news.2010.620. Retrieved 18 November 2010.
  3. ^ Zhang, Yuanbo; Tan, Yan-Wen; Stormer, Horst L.; Kim, Philip (10 November 2005). "Experimental observation of the quantum Hall effect and Berry's phase in graphene". Nature. 438 (7065): 201–204. arXiv:cond-mat/0509355. Bibcode:2005Natur.438..201Z. doi:10.1038/nature04235. PMID 16281031. S2CID 4424714.
  4. ^ "miller In the News: 2009". Miller Institute.
  5. ^ "Yuanbo Zhang of Department of Physics, Fudan University".
  6. ^ "C8: Awards | IUPAP: The International Union of Pure and Applied Physics". iupap.org. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  7. ^ "Prize Winner of the 2014 (the Second) Nishina Asia Award" (PDF). Nishina Memorial Foundation.