Artem R. Oganov
Artem R. Oganov | |
---|---|
Born |
Artem R. Oganov 3 March 1975 Moscow, Soviet Union |
Fields |
Crystallography Physics Chemistry Materials Science |
Institutions |
Stony Brook University Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology |
Alma mater |
Moscow State University University College London |
Known for |
crystal structure prediction high-pressure chemistry computational mineral physics methods of computational materials discovery |
Notable awards |
ETH Latsis Prize,[1] European Mineralogical Union Research Excellence Medal [2] |
Artem R. Oganov is a Russian and American theoretical crystallographer, mineralogist, chemist, physicist, and materials scientist.[3] He is known mostly for his works on computational materials discovery and crystal structure prediction. Artem R. Oganov was born on 3 March 1975 in Moscow, Russia. He graduated from Moscow State University in 1997 with summa cum laude and diploma in Crystallography and Crystal Chemistry. In 2002 obtained a PhD degree in Crystallography from University College London, and in 2007 got a Habilitation degree from ETH Zurich. From 2008 he is at Stony Brook University, as Professor and Director of the Center for Materials by Design.
Oganov has published over 170 peer-reviewed articles (many in top journals, e.g. Nature, Science) and book chapters. He is an author of 5 patents. Total citations >9700, h-index 52 (Google scholar, as of October 2016).[4]
He is a laureate of several prestigious awards, including an ETH Latsis Prize,[5] Research Excellence Model of the European Mineralogical Union,[6] three most-cited paper awards from Elsevier. Since 2005 he held over 10 invited professorships (Universita degli Studi di Milano, Lille'Polytech, University of Paris, University of Poitiers, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, etc). In 2011 he founded the Commission on Crystallography of Materials at the International Union of Crystallography. In 2011, Forbes magazine listed Oganov among "50 Russians who conquered the world".[7] In 2012, highly acclaimed cinema director, Laureate of State Prize Vladimir Gerchikov made a film "The color of a crystal" about Oganov,[8] and in 2015 famous TV journalist Leonid Parfenov made a film "Made by Russians" about him.[9] In 2013, magazines "Russian reporter" and "Expert" have listed Oganov among 100 most influential Russians today.[10] In 2012, Oganov became a Professor Honoris Causa of Yanshan University (China), in 2013 elected Fellow of the Mineralogical Association of America,[11] in 2015 elected Professor of the Russian Academy of Sciences.[12]
His most significant works are in fields of computational materials discovery, in particular the effects of pressure on chemical bonding, and state of matter at extreme conditions (e.g. inside the Earth and other planets). He has developed novel methods of crystal structure prediction [13] that became basis of the USPEX code,[14] used by >3500 researchers worldwide. Among the highlights are the discovery of the structure of a superhard phase of boron, gamma-B,[15][16] transparent phase of sodium,[17] new carbon allotrope,[18] stability of MgSiO3 post-perovskite in the Earth's mantle,[19] prediction of "forbidden" compounds (e.g., Na3Cl),[20][21] and discovery of borophene - a 2D-monolayer of boron atoms, with great promises for future technologies.[22] Computational methods developed by Oganov open up the way to discovery of materials with desired properties.
In 2013, having won a megagrant awarded by the Russian Government, Oganov opened a laboratory at Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology,[23] and since 2015 holds professorship at Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology. Oganov speaks 5 languages (Russian, English, French, German, and Italian), is married, has three children and is a parishioner of St. Louis Catholic Church in Moscow.[24]
References
- ↑ "Latsis – Preisträger/Innen der ETH Zürich seit 1985" (PDF).
- ↑ "Medal for Research Excellence 2007".
- ↑ Oganov's laboratory site
- ↑ Google scholar citation
- ↑ List of ETH Latsis Prize Laureates
- ↑ 2007 Research Excellence Medal
- ↑ Forbes names 50 Russians who "conquered" the world
- ↑ «The color of a crystal»
- ↑ Made by Russians
- ↑ 100 people of modern Russia
- ↑ List of MSA Fellows
- ↑ Elected Professors of RAS
- ↑ Oganov A.R., Glass C.W. (2006). "Crystal structure prediction using ab initio evolutionary techniques: principles and applications.". Journal of Chemical Physics. 124: 244704. doi:10.1063/1.2210932. PMID 16821993.
- ↑ USPEX code site
- ↑ Oganov A.R., Chen J., Gatti C., Ma Y.-Z., Ma Y.-M., Glass C.W., Liu Z., Yu T., Kurakevych O.O., Solozhenko V.L. (2009). "Ionic high-pressure form of elemental boron.". Nature. 457: 863–867. doi:10.1038/nature07736. PMID 19182772.
- ↑ Chang, Kenneth (2 February 2009). "Theory and Experiment Meet, and a New Form of Boron Is Found". New York Times. Retrieved 9 February 2015.
- ↑ Ma Y., Eremets M.I., Oganov A.R., Xie Y., Trojan I., Medvedev S., Lyakhov A.O., Valle M., Prakapenka V. (2009). "Transparent dense sodium.". Nature. 458: 182–185. doi:10.1038/nature07786.
- ↑ Li Q., Ma Y., Oganov A.R., Wang H., Wang H., Xu Y., Cui T., Mao H.-K., Zou G. (2009). "Superhard monoclinic polymorph of carbon.". Physical Review Letters. 102: 175506. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.102.175506.
- ↑ Oganov A.R., Ono S. (2004). "Theoretical and experimental evidence for a post-perovskite phase of MgSiO3 in Earth's D" layer.". Nature. 430: 445–448. doi:10.1038/nature02701. PMID 15269766.
- ↑ Zhang W.W., Oganov A.R., Goncharov A.F., Zhu Q., Boulfelfel S.E., Lyakhov A.O., Stavrou E., Somayazulu M., Prakapenka V.B., Konopkova Z. (2013). "Unexpected stoichiometries of stable sodium chlorides.". Science. 342: 1502–1505. doi:10.1126/science.1244989. PMID 24357316.
- ↑ "Salty surprise: Ordinary table salt turns into 'forbidden' forms". Phys.org. 19 December 2013. Retrieved 9 February 2015.
- ↑ Mannix A. J., Zhou X.-F., Kiraly B., Wood J. D., Alducin D., Myers B. D., Liu X., Fisher B. L., Santiago U., Guest J. R., Yacaman M. J., Ponce A., Oganov A. R., Hersam M. C., Guisinger N. P. (2015). "Synthesis of borophenes: Anisotropic, two-dimensional boron polymorphs.". Science. 350: 1513–1516. doi:10.1126/science.aad1080.
- ↑ "Artem Oganov opens a laboratory of computer design of materials at MIPT".
- ↑ "Артем Оганов: "Будущее есть только о тех, кто в него верит".".