Mercator-fellow Prof. Dr. Vladimiro Mujica
Aug. 20, 2021
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Prof. Mujica has visited us from June 23 to August 20, 2021 in the framework of the Mercator Fellowship Programm from the German Research Foundation

laudatio:

Prof. Dr. Vladimiro Mujica has a strong and world-recognized experience in quantum transport at the molecular and nanoscale. He received his Ph.D. thesis in 1985 at Uppsala University (Sweden). He did then his first post-doctoral stay with Professor Abraham Nitzan at the School of Chemistry, University of Tel-Aviv (Israel) and was also later on visiting professor at the University of Tel Aviv, Professor of Chemistry at the Universidad Central de Venezuela, and Research Professor at the Northwestern University at the group of Prof. Mark Ratner, whose groundbreaking paper in 1974 together with Ari Aviram created the basis of what nowadays is called molecular electronics, a fascinating field rapidly developing since the early 90s, and where Prof. Mujica has strongly contributed over the years. In 2009 he then joined the faculty at Arizona State University.
His research is centered on modeling the behavior of complex physical and chemical systems, in particular, the description of quantum effects in the emerging behavior of systems of nanoscopic dimensions. His areas of interest include electron transport in molecule-electrode interfaces, electron transfer, Nanophotonics, Nanomagnetism, quantum relaxation theory. During his stay, Prof. Mujica worked on the problem of spin-selective transport in helical molecules and on designing phononic filters at the atomistic level.

Mercator-fellow Prof. Dr. Vladimiro Mujica
Aug. 20, 2021
Cover
©None

Prof. Mujica has visited us from June 23 to August 20, 2021 in the framework of the Mercator Fellowship Programm from the German Research Foundation

laudatio:

Prof. Dr. Vladimiro Mujica has a strong and world-recognized experience in quantum transport at the molecular and nanoscale. He received his Ph.D. thesis in 1985 at Uppsala University (Sweden). He did then his first post-doctoral stay with Professor Abraham Nitzan at the School of Chemistry, University of Tel-Aviv (Israel) and was also later on visiting professor at the University of Tel Aviv, Professor of Chemistry at the Universidad Central de Venezuela, and Research Professor at the Northwestern University at the group of Prof. Mark Ratner, whose groundbreaking paper in 1974 together with Ari Aviram created the basis of what nowadays is called molecular electronics, a fascinating field rapidly developing since the early 90s, and where Prof. Mujica has strongly contributed over the years. In 2009 he then joined the faculty at Arizona State University.
His research is centered on modeling the behavior of complex physical and chemical systems, in particular, the description of quantum effects in the emerging behavior of systems of nanoscopic dimensions. His areas of interest include electron transport in molecule-electrode interfaces, electron transfer, Nanophotonics, Nanomagnetism, quantum relaxation theory. During his stay, Prof. Mujica worked on the problem of spin-selective transport in helical molecules and on designing phononic filters at the atomistic level.