Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Moungi Bawendi is a Lester Wolfe Professor of Chemistry at MIT and an advisor for the Minor in Energy Studies. He leads a research group that focuses on the science and applications of nanocrystals, especially semiconductor quantum dots, for electro-optics, biology and biomedicine.

  2. Moungi Gabriel Bawendi (em árabe: منجي الباوندي; Paris, 22 de março de 1961) [1] [2] é um químico francês. Atualmente é professor no Instituto de Tecnologia de Massachusetts. [3] Bawendi é conhecido por seus avanços na produção química de pontos quânticos de alta qualidade. [4] Em 2023 recebeu o Prêmio Nobel ...

  3. Moungi Bawendi (Arabic: منجي الباوندي; born 15 March 1961) is an American –Tunisian–French chemist. He is currently the Lester Wolfe Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Bawendi is known for his advances in the chemical production of high-quality quantum dots.

  4. Band-edge exciton in quantum dots of semiconductors with a degenerate valence band: Dark and bright exciton states. AL Efros, M Rosen, M Kuno, M Nirmal, DJ Norris, M Bawendi. Physical Review B 54 (7), 4843. , 1996. 1727. 1996. Type-II quantum dots: CdTe/CdSe (core/shell) and CdSe/ZnTe (core/shell) heterostructures.

  5. 4 de out. de 2023 · Moungi Bawendi, Louis Brus and Alexei Ekimov are honoured for their work on nanoscale crystals that interact with light in unusual ways. They developed a chemical method to make quantum dots of specific sizes and colours, which are used in fields from electronics to surgery.

  6. 4 de out. de 2023 · Bawendi is honored for his work on techniques to generate quantum dots of uniform size and color, along with Brus and Ekimov. He is a professor at MIT since 1990 and a leader in the development of tiny particles for biomedical imaging, displays, and quantum computing.

  7. 4 de out. de 2023 · A look at how the MIT professor spent his day after learning he had won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Today, MIT Professor Moungi Bawendi won a share of the 2023 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, for his role in developing quantum dots — nanoscale particles that can emit exceedingly bright light.