Valeria Nicolosi

Valeria Nicolosi is a nanotechnologist who specializes in low-dimensional nano-structures and high-end electron microscopy.[1]

Career

She received her BSc in Chemistry from the University of Catania in 2001 and a PhD in Physics in 2006 from Trinity College Dublin.[1] In 2017, Trinity College Dublin selected her as a Professorial Fellow.[2] Her research has been funded with over 12 million euros since 2012,[3] and is currently associated with Ireland's Advanced Materials and BioEngineering Research (AMBER) science foundation. In addition to being a principal investigator with AMBER, she is Trinity College Dublin's Chair of Nanomaterials and Advanced Microscopy.[1][4]

She has previously worked at the University of Oxford where she held a Royal Academy of Engineering/EPSRC Fellowship, and was awarded a European Research Council starting grant to expand her work.[3]

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gollark: Nothing happens. At all.
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gollark: It runs a "root" i.e. unsandboxed shell.

References

  1. "Powering the World: Alternative and Renewable Energy Sources", Our Precarious Habitat… It's in Your Hands, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2007, pp. 291–334, doi:10.1002/9780470099704.ch7, ISBN 9780470099704
  2. "Trinity Monday 2017 — Fellows and Scholars". Trinity College Dublin. Retrieved 2019-04-05.
  3. "Dublin researcher awarded €2.5m to create the battery of the future". Silicon Republic. Retrieved 2016-02-15.
  4. "Amber". ambercentre.ie. Retrieved 2019-04-05.
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