Biography |
Profile
Professor of experimental condensed-matter physics with the University of Alabama Department of Physics and Astronomy, the Tri-Campus Materials Sciences Program and the Graduate School, with outstanding program reviews in all areas, attained through topical research projects, progressive undergraduate and graduate education methods, and contributions to the academic community.
Education
- B.A., Physics and Mathematics, 1982, Lycoming College
- Ph.D., Physics, 1992, The Pennsylvania State University
- 1993-1995, Postdoctoral Scholar, The Pennsylvania State University
- 1995-1996, Postdoctoral Researcher, Louisiana State University
- 1996-2001, Assistant Professor of Physics, University of Alabama
- 2001-2005, Associate Professor of Physics, University of Alabama
- 2005-present, Professor of Physics, University of Alabama
- 2008-2010, Graduate Director of Physics, University of Alabama
- American Physical Society
- AVS Science and Technology Society
- Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
- Sigma Pi Sigma National Physics Honor Society
Awards
- National Science Foundation International Programs Postdoctoral Fellowship, Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics, Munich, Germany
- Participating Guest Scientist, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
- IBM Graduate Researcher, Thomas J. Watson Research Center
- Outstanding Teaching Award, The Pennsylvania State University Department of Physics
- Davey Fellowship, The Pennsylvania State University Department of Physics
- Charles J. Kocian Award for Outstanding Mathematics Major, Lycoming College
- Elisha Benson Kline Prize in Applied Mathematics, Lycoming College
- John C. McCune Memorial Prize in Physics, Lycoming College
- 1988-1992, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, inverse photoemission experiments
- 1991-1993, National Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory, synchrotron radiation experiments
- 1994-1996, Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, synchrotron radiation experiments
- 1994-1996, Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, synchrotron radiation experiments
- 1994-1995, Max Plank Institute for Plasma Physics, Munich, Germany, spin resolved inverse photoemission experiments
- 1994-present, Center for Advanced Microstructures and Devices, Baton Rouge, LA, synchrotron radiation experiments
- 1998-present, Synchrotron Radiation Center, Stoughton, WI, synchrotron radiation experiments
- 2000-present, High Flux Isotope Reactor, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, neutron scattering
- 2002-2004, Swiss Spallation Neutron Source, Paul Sherrer Institute, neutron scattering
- 2002-2004, Intense Pulsed Neutron Source, Argonne National Laboratory, neutron scattering
- 2002-2007, National Center for Neutron Scattering, National Institute for Science and Technology, neutron scattering
- 2004-2008, Center for Nanoscale Materials Science, Argonne National Laboratory, nanofabrication
- 2005-present, Center for Nanophase Materials, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, scanning electron microscopy with polarization analysis
- 2006-present, Spallation Neutron Source, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, neutron scattering
- 1994-1995, Spin resolved inverse photoemission, PI, NSF, $36,000
- 1996-2001, Magnetic nanostructures, co-PI (with 4 others), DOD, $2,000,000
- 1996-1998, UA MRSEC MINT Center, co-PI (with 7 others), NSF, $640,000
- 1996-1998, Magnetic imaging, PI (with W. Doyle), ARO, $300,000
- 1997-1998, Acquisition of a multi-wavelength spectroscopic ellispsometer, PI (with J. Barnard), NSF EPSCOR Infrastructure, $100,000
- 1998-1999, Single-crystal spin valves, PI (with H. Fujiwara), National Storage Industry Consortium, $50,000
- 2000-2003, Oligomolecular nanodevices, co-PI (with 4 others), NSF, $1,700,000
- 2001-2005, Neutron scattering of magnetic nanostructures, PI, DOE EPSCOR, $500,000
- 2002-2007, UA MRSEC MINT center, co-PI (with 11 others), NSF, $6,000,000
- 2002-2004, SGER: Self assembled nanowires for spin electronics, PI (with H. Fujiwara), NSF, $80,000
- 2003-2005, Development of a synchrotron beam line for magnetics research and education, co-PI (with 4 others), NSF, $94,000
- 2004-2008, Nanoscale catalysts for fuel cells, co-PI (with 6 others), DOE EPSCOR, $500,000
- 2005-2007, Acquisition of a advanced analytical transmission electron microscope for materials research and education, co-PI (with 4 others), NSF, $1,200,000
- 2006-2007, Commissioning of a spin and angle resolved electron spectrometer, PI, DOE, $30,000
- 2008-2011, Exchange Interactions in Epitaxial Intermetallic Layers, co-PI (with P.R. LeClair), DOE EPSCOR, $450,000
- 2008-2011, Major Research Instrumentation: Acquisition of A Hybrid Deposition System for Materials Science Research and Education, PI, NSF, $413,000
- 2010-2012, Major Research Instrumentation: Acquisition of a High Energy Resolution Angle Resolved Spin-Polarized Photoemission Instrument, co-PI, NSF, $713,000.
Teaching
- PH105, General Physics with Calculus I. Taught in a studio format where lecture and laboratory are combined
- PH106, General Physics with Calculus II. The second semester of physics in the engineering curriculum
- BUI301, The Science of Survival. Covered topical scientific problems facing our world today, including energy, global warming, preservation of species and the population explosion
- PH334, Analog Electronics. The basics of analog electronics for scientific measurements
- PH434/534, Digital Electronics and Computer Interfacing. Trains users of the LabVIEW computer language develop programs for the collection and analysis of scientific data
- PH491/591, Advanced Experimental Physics. Vacuum technique, thin film deposition, spectroscopy, diffraction, microscopy and microfabrication are covered
- 1994-present, referee for Physical Review Letters, Physical Review B, Applied Physics Letters, Journal of Applied Physics, Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology, Nuclear Instruments and Methods of Physics Research, Surface Science, IEEE Transactions on Magnetics.
- 1998-present, reviewer for National Science Foundation, Department of Energy, the Research Corporation, European Science Foundation, NIST National Center for Neutron Research, Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, U.S. Civilian Research and Development Foundation and Louisiana State Board of Regents
- 1996-present, department committee work including colloquium committee (1996-1998, chair in 1997), graduate examinations committee (1997-1999, chair in 1998), two faculty search committees, SPS advisor (1999-2002), web designer (2000-2005), long range planning committee (2004-2006), World Year in Physics demonstration organizer (2005)
- 2003-2006, university-wide Academics and Athletics Committee
- 2005-2008, college-wide Committee on Undergraduate Learning
- 2005-2007, college-wide Tenure and Promotion Committee
- 2008-2010, university-wide Undergraduate Programs and Services Committee
- 2006-2007, Secretary of Magnetic Interfaces and Nanostructures Division of the AVS Science and Technology Society
- 2007-2008, Chairman of Magnetic Interfaces and Nanostructures Division of the AVS Science and Technology Society
- 2011-2012, Treasurer of Magnetic Interfaces and Nanostructures Division of the AVS Science and Technology Society
- 2011-2013, ORNL Neutron Scattering Science Review Committee.
Collaborators over the Past Four Years
Haile Ambaye (ORNL), Martin Bakker (UA), Silas Blackstock (UA), William Butler (UA), Anthony Caruso (UMissou), Hideo Fujiwara (UA), J.W. Harrell (UA), Tonya Klein (UA), Frank Klose (ANSTO), Alan Lane (UA), Valeria Lauter (ORNL), Wai-Tung Lee (ANSTO), Dieter Lott (GKSS), David Nikles (UA), J. Lee Robertson (ORNL), Rainer Schad (UA), Shane Street (UA), Greg Szulczewski (UA), Pieter Visscher (UA), Garry Warren (UA), Mark Weaver (UA). Students / Postdocs Advised
Research Experiences for Undergraduates: Carey Nilson (1998), Fredrick Mackey (1999), Kristen Rover (2000), Aaron Himmler (2001), Kara Scott (2002), Ihouma Nwagwu (2003), Tracy Williams (2004)
Undergraduate Researchers: Wayne Eads (1997), James Suggs (1998), Knut Lehman (2000), Tien Bui (2002), Emad M. Abdel-Raouf (2003), Brett Jenkins (2004), Gabriel Hammerquest (2005), Jonathan Crowfoot (2005), Patrick Patterson (2006)
Graduate Researchers: Stefan Maat (MS & PhD 5/2000), Congxiao Liu (PhD 5/2001), Fenglin Liu (1997-2001), Fredrick Mackey (2000-2003), Said Al-Ghamdi(2002-2004), Zhao Zhiya (MS 5/2004), Hamid Alouach (MS 5/2003, PhD 12/2004), Tien Bui (MS 5/2005), Prakash Mani (PhD 5/2006), Ilir Zoto (PhD 5/2006), Michael J. Walock (MS 6/2009), Hwachol Lee (PhD 5/2012), Jian Yu (current), Ezhil Manoharan (current), Narpinder Chahil (current)
Postdoctoral Researchers: Mark Tomlinson (1996-1997), Olga Koshkina (1996-1997), Mike Umlor (1996-1998), Liyong Shen (1997-1999), Huaming Jiang (1997-1999), Chengtao Yu (1999-2000), Vemuru V. Krishnamurthy (2002-2005), Hideo Sato (2008-2010).
Graduate and Postdoctoral Advisors
graduate and postdoctoral advisor: Roy F. Willis, Penn State University
postdoctoral advisor: Richard L. Kurtz, Louisiana State University
