Richard E. Smalley Translate this page Chemienobelpreis 1996 (Nobel Prize Chemistry 1996) RichardE. smalley, amerikan. Chemiker, geb. 6. Juni 1943. http://www.zuta.de/npchem/smalley.htm
MSN Encarta - Smalley, Richard E. Sign in above. smalley, richard E. smalley, richard E. (1943 ), American chemist,physicist, and Nobel laureate. Find more about smalley, richard E. from, http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761589323/Smalley_Richard_E.html
Extractions: Subscription Article MSN Encarta Premium: Get this article, plus 60,000 other articles, an interactive atlas, dictionaries, thesaurus, articles from 100 leading magazines, homework tools, daily math help and more for $4.95/month or $29.95/year (plus applicable taxes.) Learn more. This article is exclusively available for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers. Already a subscriber? Sign in above. Smalley, Richard E. Smalley, Richard E. (1943-Â ), American chemist, physicist, and Nobel laureate. In 1985 a group led by Smalley at Rice University in Houston, Texas,... Related Items Buckminsterfullerene Carbon 8 items Selected Web Links Richard Errett Smalley [Nobel Foundation] 1 item Want more Encarta? Become a subscriber today and gain access to: Find more about Smalley, Richard E.
Smalley, Richard E. [AIP Articles] YingZhong Ma, Jens Stenger, Jörg Zimmermann, Sergei M. Bachilo, RichardE. smalley, R. Bruce Weisman, and Graham R. Fleming, J. Chem. Phys. http://authors.aip.org/Richard_E._Smalley.html
Extractions: Smalley, Richard E. AIP Journal Articles: Ultrafast carrier dynamics in single-walled carbon nanotubes probed by femtosecond spectroscopy J. Chem. Phys. (7) 3368 (15 Feb 2004) Infrared Analysis of Amine Treated Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes Produced by Decomposition of CO Frank Hennrich , Manfred M. Kappes , Michael S. Strano , Robert H. Hauge , and Richard E. Smalley AIP Conf. Proc. (1) 197 (20 Oct 2003) n,m )-Assigned Absorption and Emission Spectra of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes R. Bruce Weisman, Sergei M. Bachilo, Michael S. Strano, Carter Kittrell, Robert H. Hauge, and Richard E. Smalley AIP Conf. Proc. (1) 241 (20 Oct 2003) Assignment of (n,m) Raman and Absorption Spectral Features of Metallic Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes Michael S. Strano, Erik H. Haroz, Carter Kittrell, Robert H. Hauge, and Richard E. Smalley AIP Conf. Proc. (1) 246 (20 Oct 2003) Roping and wrapping carbon nanotubes Kevin D. Ausman, Michael J. O'Connell, Peter Boul, Lars M. Ericson, Michael J. Casavant, Deron A. Walters, Chad Huffman, Rajesh Saini, Yuhuang Wang, Erik Haroz, Edward W. Billups, and Richard E. Smalley AIP Conf. Proc.
SMALLEY, RICHARD E. - CIRS smalley, richard E. Email res@cnst.rice.edu Gene and Norman Hackerman Professorof Chemistry and Professor of Physics, Rice University Thèmes de recherche http://www.cirs-tm.org/Chercheurs/chercheurs1.php?id=229
SMALLEY, RICHARD E. - CIRS smalley, richard E. Email res@cnst.rice.edu Gene and Norman Hackerman Professorof Chemistry and Professor of Physics, Rice University Research Interests http://www.cirs-tm.org/researchers/researchers.php?id=229
Richard E. Smalley der erste herausragende Erfolg des frischgebackenen Nobelpreisträgers Prof. http://rhein-zeitung.de/old/96/10/10/topnews/smalley.html
Extractions: Hamburg (dpa) - Die Entdeckung der "Buckyballs" ist nicht der erste herausragende Erfolg des frischgebackenen Nobelpreisträgers Prof. Richard E. Smalley. Schon als der Amerikaner vor vier Jahren mit dem hochdotierten Robert-A.-Welch-Preis geehrt wurde, hieß es in der Begründung: p> "Smalley hat so viele bedeutende Entdeckungen gemacht, daß es eine imponierende Aufgabe wäre, sie alle aufzuzählen." Der von ihm entwickelte "Clusterstrahl-Generator", mit dem der Chemiker und seine Kollegen die ersten Fullerene herstellten, lockt Forscher aus aller Welt ins Labor des Wissenschaftlers in Houston (Texas). Last edited: aj@rhein-zeitung.de
Richard E. Smalley richard E. smalley. Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistryand Professor of Physics 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner. http://www.spacetransportation.org/Detailed/5646.html
Extractions: Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry and Professor of Physics - 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner. Professor Smalley's research laboratory is best known for the discovery of C60 and the fullerenes in 1985 and much of the subsequent development of this field. Home Technology Nanotechnology People : Richard E. Smalley Richard E. Smalley Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry and Professor of Physics - 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize Winner. Professor Smalley's research laboratory is best known for the discovery of C60 and the fullerenes in 1985 and much of the subsequent development of this field.
American Scientist Online richard E. smalley. richard E. smalley is the Gene and Norman HackermanProfessor of Chemistry and professor of physics at Rice University http://www.americanscientist.org/template/AuthorDetail/authorid/1092
Extractions: Home Current Issue Archives Bookshelf ... Subscribe In This Section Search Book Reviews by Issue Issue Index Topical Index ... Classics Site Search Advanced Search Visitor Login Username Password Help with login Forgot your password? Change your username Richard E. Smalley is the Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry and professor of physics at Rice University, where he also directs the Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology. In 1996 he shared the Nobel Prize in chemistry for the discovery of fullerenes, best known as the family of the buckyball C . His current interests center on teh giant fullerene molecules (carbon nanotubes) and their producction and real-world applications. Fullerene Nanotubes: C and Beyond Feature Article ADVERTISEMENTS About American Scientist Site Map Text Archive ... Contact Us
National Academy Of Sciences - Members smalley, richard E. Rice University. smalley has been a pioneer in developingsupersonic jet spectroscopy. In particular, his invention http://www4.nationalacademies.org/nas/naspub.nsf/(urllinks)/NAS-58N44F?opendocum
The Scientist - The Leaders Of Science - Richard E. Smalley The Scientist 8178, Sep. 05, 1994, ); //. Leaders. The Leadersof Science richard E. smalley. Date September 5, 1994, pp.9. http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1994/sep/leaders_p8_940905.html
Extractions: Rice University, Houston. Richard Smalley believes that "science is a crucial enterprise, not just to keep us economically competitive with other nations but, more important, to develop practical solutions to the dilemmas facing society." In his Rice University laboratory, Smalley developed a new technology supersonic cluster beams that enables a more detailed understanding of polyatomic structures. This technology provided an unprecedented look at the structure and character of chemical bonds in larger molecules. This research also led to the discovery of C60, the third elemental form of carbon in addition to diamond and graphite, in 1985. A soccer-ball-shaped molecule, C60 is known as buckminsterfullerene, or "buckyball," because its structure resembles the geodesic domes made famous by R. Buckminster Fuller. Smalley is currently concentrating on producing continuous carbon fibers, which essentially are giant single fullerene molecules. Just a few nanometers wide but many centimeters long, the fullerene fibers are expected to be the strongest fibers ever manufactured, perhaps 100 times stronger than steel. When eventually produced in large quantities, fullerene fibers promise to have widespread practical applications in the chemical, automotive, aerospace, and other major industries.
Prof. Smalley Lecture richard E. smalley?. Gene and ?. 14001500richard E. smalley Buckytubes! New materials http://www.photon.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~maruyama/SLecture/slecture-j.html
S. Maruyama's Site Lecture by Professor richard E. smalley Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistryand Professor of Physics at Rice University 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize http://www.photon.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~maruyama/SLecture/slecture.html
"Small Wonders" Participants - Richard E. Smalley, Ph.D. richard E. smalley, Ph.D., 1996 Nobel Laureate, Chemistry, Gene Norman HackermanProfessor of Chemistry Professor of Physics, Rice University Rice University. http://www.nsf.gov/od/lpa/priority/nano/smalley_bio.htm
Extractions: Professor Smalley received his B.S. degree in 1965 from the University of Michigan and Ph.D. from Princeton in 1973, with an intervening four-year period in industry as a research chemist with Shell. During an unusually productive postdoctoral period with Lennard Wharton and Donald Levy at the University of Chicago, he pioneered what has become one of the most powerful techniques in chemical physics; supersonic beam laser spectroscopy. After coming to Rice University in 1976 he rose rapidly through the academic ranks, being named to the Gene and Norman Hackerman Chair in Chemistry in 1982. He was one of the founders of the Rice Quantum Institute in 1979, and served as the Chairman of this interdisciplinary Institute from 1986 to 1996. Since January 1990 he has also been a Professor in the Department of Physics, and was appointed Director of the new Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology at Rice in 1996. In 1990 he was elected to the National Academy of Sciences, and in 1991 to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Storia Della Chimica. Premi Nobel Per La Chimica: Smalley Translate this page Theatrum Chemicum. Personae richard E. smalley. richard E. smalley. n. 1943.Premio Nobel per la chimica 1996. con Robert F. Curl Jr. e con Harold W. Kroto. http://www.minerva.unito.it/Theatrum Chemicum/NobelChimica/Smalley.htm
The Ernest Orlando Lawrence Award - Richard E. Smalley, 1991 1990 s Laureates richard E. smalley, 1991 Chemistry For his bold and innovativeresearch and consistent leadership in the generation and characterization of http://www.sc.doe.gov/sc-5/lawrence/html/Laureates/richarde.htm
Extractions: Chemistry: For his bold and innovative research and consistent leadership in the generation and characterization of atomic clusters and, in particular, for the discovery of C60 (Buckminsterfullerene) and its related compounds. Go Back About the Award Award Laureates The Life of Ernest Orlando Lawrence ... Comments
The Ernest Orlando Lawrence Award - Discipline Thomas Picraux, 1991, richard E. smalley, richard Fortner, RulonLinford, J. Pace Vandevender, Peter Schultz, Zachary Fish, 1993,Robert http://www.sc.doe.gov/sc-5/lawrence/html/discipline.htm
ICASE Colloquium: Richard E. Smalley On November 19, 1999 ICASE COLLOQUIUM. Buckytubes New Materials and New Devices fromCarbon . richard E. smalley. Rice University. Friday, November 19 http://www.icase.edu/colloq-v3/data/colloq.Smalley.Richard.1999.11.19.html
Nobel Prize Winning Chemists richard E. smalley. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1996. richard E. smalley was bornin Akron, Ohio on june 6, 1943. He is the youngest of four children. http://www.sanbenito.k12.tx.us/district/webpages2002/judymedrano/Nobel Winners/r
Extractions: Nobel Prize Winning Chemists Richard E. Smalley The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1996 Richard E. Smalley was born in Akron, Ohio on june 6, 1943. He is the youngest of four children. His mother, Esther Virginia Rhoads, was the third of six children of Charlotte Kraft and Erret Stanley Rhoads, a wealthy manufacturer of furniture in the Kansas City area. His father, Frank Dudley Smalley, a railroad mail clerk in Kansas City. The major motivation for his entering a career in science, was the successful launching of Sputnik in 1957. He set up a private study in the partly furnished, unheated attic of his home, and began to spend long hours in solitude while studying and reading. This happened to be the year when he began to study chemistry for the first time. After his junior yeat, he knew he could be successful at science. His mother's youngest sibling, Dr. Sara Jane Rhoads, was one of the first woman in the united States to ever reach the rank of full professor of chemistry. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1996 together with Sir Harold Kroto and Robert F. Curl Jr., "for their discovery of fullerenes".
News Release:Nobel Prize Winner Richard E. Smalley To Speak March 20, 2003 richard E. smalley, the 1996 Nobel Prize winner for chemistryand a professor of chemistry and physics at Rice University, will present an http://www.trinity.edu/departments/public_relations/news_releases/decoursey-smal
Extractions: Susie P. Gonzalez susie.gonzalez@trinity.edu March 20, 2003 Richard E. Smalley, the 1996 Nobel Prize winner for chemistry and a professor of chemistry and physics at Rice University, will present an illustrated lecture on the technological and economic implications of his research on nanotechnology during a lecture at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 16 in Laurie Auditorium on the campus of Trinity University. This event was originally scheduled for April 2. Professor Smalley will deliver the 2003 DeCoursey Lecture titled Buckytubes! New Applications of Nanotechology. The presentation is free and open to the public. Nanotechnology, an emerging and revolutionary technology, involves mechanical and electronic devices at the molecular level where lengths and diameters are measured in nanometers. A nanometer equals one-millionth of a millimeter. Professor Smalley is widely known for the discovery in 1985 of Buckminsterfullerenes, a new form of pure carbon that is formed when 60 carbon molecules combine to form a closed hollow sphere with a one-nanometer diameter. The discovery of this new molecule gave rise to the less formal name of buckyball and led to the development of an additional fullerene, the buckytube, a cylindrical form of buckyballs. Buckytubes have the form of one nanometer diameter fibers that are 10 times stronger than steel at a fraction of the weight. Professor Smalley has been involved in the development of new technologies based on these discoveries and believes that these and other nanotechnologies will have important and revolutionary applications in the near future.