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Conference Mission

Conference Structure

Conference Programme

Conference Participants

Invited Speakers & Fields of Interest

Steering Committee
Local Organizing Committee
 
Harry Dorn
Professor, Physical Chemistry and Director of Va. Tech Center for Self-Assembled Nano-Devices (CSAND)
 
E-mail: hdorn@vt.edu
Office: 1109 Hahn Hall
Phone: 540-231-5953
Fax: 540-231-3255

Education
Ph.D. 1974, University of Calif., Davis
B.S. 1963-1966 University of California, Santa Barbara, CA

Research Interests

Our research group has expertise in two broad research areas: new carbon-based fullerene materials and magnetic resonance spectroscopies. The latter area of interest involves spectroscopic studies utilizing nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), and dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP). The second area of research is the study of new carbon-based materials including fullerenes ("Buckyballs"), nanotubes, and endohedral metallofullerenes. Our fullerene laboratory at Tech (FLAT) developed the expertise to prepare, purify, and characterize various carbon fullerene, endohedral metallofullerene, and nano-tube samples. In the United States, FLAT leads in the separation of endohedral metallofullerenes. Currently, we have discovered and isolated more than 25 unique nanoclusters (e.g. La2@C72, Sc4@C82, Sc3N@C68, and ErScN@C68) and are actively characterizing their physical and chemical properties for a variety of specialized applications. A main thrust of our research effort is to provide polyhydroxylated and other nanomaterial derivatives for future medical applications, such as MRI contrast agents. Another important area of research involves the evaluation of chemical reactivity and selectivity differences due to the various types of metal atoms that can be encapsulated. FLAT presently has active collaborations with many other groups at Va Tech and 20 other laboratories world-wide.

Filled buckyballs - diamonds from soot