Dr Serge Cosnier is Research Director exceptional class at CNRS at the Grenoble Alpes university (France). He is member of the Academia Europaea, member of the European Academy of Sciences and Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering. His activity is focused on molecular electrochemistry and bioelectrochemistry with the development of biosensors, biofuel cells and bio-nanomaterials based on carbon nanotubes. Dr Cosnier has authored over 394 publications (h-index Web of Science 70, Google Scholar 82), 3 books and 20 book chapters and holds 20 patents.
Serge Cosnier(Research Area)
Biomaterials based on carbon nanotubes and glyconanoparticles for energy conversion and electroanalysis
Nico Felicien Declercq is a physicist and mechanical engineer. He is a professor with the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta and Georgia Tech Lorraine in France. He is specialized in ultrasonic nondestructive evaluation of materials, propagation of ultrasonic waves in highly complex materials, in acoustics, in theoretical and experimental linear and nonlinear ultrasonics, acousto-optics, Medical Physics and Acoustic Microscopy. He has investigated the acoustics of Chichen Itza and Epidaurus.
Declercq received his BSc and MSc in physics (with a major in astrophysics) from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in 1996 and 2000, respectively, and received a PhD in engineering physics from Ghent University in 2005. He worked as a Belgian National Science Foundation (FWO Vlaanderen) postdoctoral fellow with Ghent University and has been a visiting scientist, supported by NATO, at the National Center for Physical Acoustics at the University of Mississippi, before joining Georgia Tech in 2006.
Declercq received the International Dennis Gabor Award from the NOVOFER Foundation of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences on December 21, 2006. He received the ICA Early Career Award "For outstanding contributions to ultrasonics, particularly for studies of propagation and diffraction of acoustic waves" from the International Commission for Acoustics in 2007.
Declercq has been president (2013-2015) of the steering board of the International Congress on Ultrasonics, as well as president of their 2015 congress. He is an associate editor of the journal Acta Acustica united with Acustica, associate editor of the Journal of Nondestructive Evaluation, and founding editor-in-chief of Elsevier's Physics in Medicine. He serves on technical committees of the French Acoustical Society and is the Chair of the Ultrasonics Technical Committee of the European Acoustics Association.
Nico Felicien Declercq(Research Area)
He is specialized in ultrasonic nondestructive evaluation of materials, propagation of ultrasonic waves in highly complex materials, in acoustics, in theoretical and experimental linear and nonlinear ultrasonics, acousto-optics, Medical Physics and Acoustic Microscopy. He has investigated the acoustics of Chichen Itza and Epidaurus.
Martha Greenblatt is a chemist, researcher, and faculty member at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey. As of January 2008 she was the only female chair of a science department in the School of Arts and Science. Greenblatt took the position of Chair of the Chemistry Department at Rutgers while pursuing research interests in solid state inorganic chemistry. She was also the recipient of the 2003 American Chemical Society’s Garvan-Olin Medal – a national award given yearly to an outstanding woman chemist. In 2004, she became Board of Governors Professor of Chemistry at Rutgers.
In January 1962 she received a BSc (cum laude) in Chemistry from Brooklyn College. Greenblatt studied under Professor Herman Marks, taking his famous Introduction to Polymer course. Rudy Marcus was her chemical physics professor, who later received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for work he did at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute in the 1950s and 1960s. She earned her Ph.D from the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute in 1967.
Her first job was as a chemist at the Chiclets Chewing Gum Company in Long Island City. From 1972-1973 she was a Visiting Scientist at the Weizmann Institute in Israel. In 1974 she joined the faculty at Rutgers University. In 1980 she spent a summer as Visiting Professor at the Clarendon Laboratory at Oxford University in England. She took a sabbatical year at Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey from 1980-1981.
Greenblatt's research is in the area of solid-state chemistry, specializing in the synthesis and characterization of quasi-low-dimensional transition metal compounds, fast ionic motion in solids, and high-temperature superconducting materials.
Martha Greenblatt(Research Area)
Solid state inorganic chemistry; synthesis and crystal growth of novel transition metal compounds with quasi-low-dimensional properties including perovskite-related manganates, coboltates and ferrates with large magnetoresistant properties, transition metal (Mo, W, Nb) oxide bronzes, metal cluster chalcogenides, transition metal nitrides, and high temperature superconductors. Properties of compounds are characterized by X-ray diffraction, magnetic susceptibility, electronic conductivity, Seebeck effect, X-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy, and thermal analysis. Structural-physicochemical property relationships are emphasized. Particular interest in compounds with electronic correlations/instabilities that lead to metal-to- insulator or metal-to-charge density wave, or superconducting transitions. Because of the highly aniosotropic behavior of low-dimensional materials, single crystal growth of bulk materials and films are pursued.
Özen ÖZER received her BSc and MSc degree in Mathematics from Trakya University, Edirne (Turkey) and also PhD degree in Mathematics from Süleyman Demirel University, Isparta (Turkey), respectively. Currently, she works as an Associate Professor Doctor at the Kırklareli University. Her research of specialization includes the Theory of Real Quadratic Number Fields with applications, Diophantine and Pell Equations, Arithmetic Functions, Fixed Point Theory, p_adic Analysis, q_ Analysis, Special Integer Sequences, Diophantine Sets, Nonlinear Analysis, Optimization, Cryptology and so on…
She has published nearly 50 research papers in high quality international journals. She also has written books published on Number Theory and Algebra in international publishing houses. She has attended various national and international conferences. Besides, she organizes many international conferences and takes charge in them as organizer or member of scientific committee. She also works as editor and referees in many qualified international journals.
ÖZEN ÖZER(Research Area)
Real Quadratic Number Fields, Diophantine Sets, Algebraic Number Theory, Algebra, Quadratic Field Extensions, Arithmetic functions, Pell Equations, Diophantine Equations, Analytic Number Theory, Abstract Mathematics, Set Theory, C*-Algebra, Fixed Point Theory, Metric Spaces, Cryptology, Neuronal Crypto Systems, Prime Numbers,…
Vladimir V. Rumyantsev is Head of Department of Theory of Complex Systems Dynamic Properties at A.A. Galkin Donetsk Institute for Physics and Engineering (DonIPE). He is Professor of Theoretical Physics and Nanotechnology Department at Donetsk National University (DonNU). He received PhD in Theoretical Physics (1988) from DonNU and Dr. Sci. in Condensed Matter Physics (2007) from DonIPE. Prof. Rumyantsev has authored/co-authored 4 books, 2 chapters in books and more than 270 scientific publications. He is a member of the American Physical Society as well as Mediterranean Institute of Fundamental Physics (MIFP, Italy) and Editor-in-Chiff of Journal of Photonic Materials and Technology (Science PG, USA).
Vladimir V. Rumyantsev(Research Area)
Current research interests include various aspects of solid state physics, crystallooptics, photonics; more particularly - theoretical study of the effects of disorder in quasi-two-dimensional nanofilms and layered structures caused by the propagation of electromagnetic and acoustic excitations, photonics of imperfect structures and dispersion of electromagnetic excitations in non-ideal lattices of coupled microcavities containing quantum dots..
Dr. Dinh-Truong Nguyen previously worked as a Postdoctoral Researcher in Genome Biology Lab at Konkuk University, Seoul, South Korea where he completed his Ph.D. His research interests lie in the area of Genetics, Immunogenetics, Epigenetics, Evolutionary biology and Genomics. Actively, he has collaborated with researchers in the Labs from Korea and other countries to publish the meaningful and essential datasets in numerous international conferences and high quality journals such as Nature (England), BMC Genomics (England), BMC Genetics (England), Animal Genetics (England), Animal Biotechnology (USA), Tissue Antigens (Denmark), Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry (USA), Oncotarget, Nanomaterials and ect…He is currently focusing on the projects about the personalized therapy in cancer treatment as well as researching on traditional medicine products which could contribute to provide some clues in improving human health.