Nano/Bio Interface Center

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The Nano/Bio Interface Center is a Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center at the University of Pennsylvania. It specializes in bionanotechnology, combining aspects of life sciences and engineering,[1] with a particular focus in biomolecular optoelectronics and molecular motions, including developing new scanning probe microscopy techniques.[2][3] It offers a master's degree in nanotechnology. The center was established in 2004 with a US$11.6 million grant from the National Science Foundation, and received an additional $11.9 million grant in 2009.[4] By 2013 it had constructed a new facility, the Krishna P. Singh Center for Nanotechnology.[5]

Award for Research Excellence in Nanotechnology

The Award for Research Excellence in Nanotechnology is given by the Nano/Bio Interface Center each year to an outstanding researcher in nanotechnology.[6] The award is given each year at the center's NanoDay outreach event.[5]

Year Recipient Institution Rationale
2005 Horst Störmer cropped.jpg Horst Störmer Columbia University "[for having] worked extensively on the properties of two-dimensional electron sheets in semiconductors"[6]
2006 Block banjo small.jpg Steven M. Block Stanford University "[for having] pioneered the use of laser-based optical traps (or “optical tweezers”) to study the nanoscale motions of individual biomolecules"[6]
2007 Charles M. Lieber Harvard University "[for having] pioneered the synthesis of a broad range of nanoscale materials, the characterization of the unique physical properties of these materials and the development of methods of hierarchical assembly of nanoscale wires, together with the demonstration of applications of these materials in nanoelectronics, nanocomputing, biological and chemical sensing, neurobiology, and nanophotonics"[6]
Christoph Gerber University of Basal "[for having] focused on nanoscale science as a pioneer in scanning probe microscopy, making major contributions to the invention of the scanning tunneling microscope and the atomic force microscope (AFM)"[6]
2008 Naomi J. Halas Rice University "[for] inventing nanoshells, a new type of nanoparticle with tunable optical properties"[6]
2009 Harold Craighead Cornell University "[for having] been a pioneer in nanofabrication methods and the application of engineered nanosystems for research and device applications"[6]
2010 75px Angela Belcher Massachusetts Institute of Technology [7]
2011 75px Don Eigler IBM "[for having] specialized in the development and use of low temperature scanning tunneling microscopes"[6]
2012 Toshio Ando Kanazawa University "[for] developing high-speed atomic force microscopy (HS-AFM) techniques to directly visualize protein molecules in action at high spatiotemporal resolution"[6][8]
2013 Joseph W. Lyding University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign "[for] develop[ing] one of the first STMs in the US, which he used to study charge density waves. This work evolved to studies of silicon surfaces under ultrahigh vacuum"[6][9][10]
2014 Charles Marcus University of Copenhagen "[for] experiments on spin control in semiconductor quantum dot systems, control of electronic states in nanowires, carbon nanotubes and graphene, development of hyperpolarized nanoparticles for medical imaging, interferometry in the fractional quantum Hall effect, and detection of Majorana fermions in semiconductor/superconductor hybrid structures"[6][11]
2015 75px Xiaowei Zhuang Harvard University "for her work in the development and application of advanced optical imaging techniques for the studies of biological systems"[12]

References

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