Follow a successful debut last year, Hack the Microscope has expanded to a worldwide event. The UT-organized competition will include participants at nearly 20 sites in the US, Europe, Korea, Singapore, Qatar, and India.
Sergei Kalinin has been named the winner of the David Adler Lectureship Award in the Field of Materials Physics by the American Physical Society as an outstanding contributor in the field of materials physics who is notable for high quality research, review articles, and lecturing.
Takeshi Egami and Sergei Kalinin are among the 2023 class of 502 scientists, engineers, and innovators across 24 AAAS disciplinary sections to have been elected fellows of the American Association for Advancement Sciences.
Sergei Kalinin’s team constructed an atomic force microscope that autonomously performs experiments, boosting materials characterization to unprecedented rates.
In recognition of his technical and educational contributions to the field, Sergei Kalinin will receive the Microanalysis Society’s 2024 Peter Duncumb Award.
Thermo Fisher donated two liquid-handling robots to the University of Tennessee’s department of material sciences and engineering, helping create a unique fully automated lab.
Sergei Kalinin was recently recognized by multiple organizations for his outstanding science and technical contributions in nanotechnology and microscopy.
Sergei Kalinin and collaborators at UT and ORNL earned an R&D100 Award for developing autonomous processes for microscopy that can impact research methods in multiple disciplines.
The Manuel Cardona Seminar Series is one of the most selective conferences in the world of nanotechnology and nanomaterials. Being asked to […]
UT MSE Sergei Kalinin has been invited to give a plenary lecture in the Manuel Cardona Seminar Series at the […]