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04/16/2020 12:35

Otto-Hahn-Medal for Veronika Sunko and Yang Zhang

Dipl.-Übers. Ingrid Rothe Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Max-Planck-Institut für Chemische Physik fester Stoffe

    Yang Zhang of the Solid State Chemistry department and Veronika Sunko of the Physics of Quantum Materials have each been awarded the Otto Hahn Medal of the Max Planck Society for their outstanding doctoral research.

    Yang Zhang has been honoured for the development of a novel theoretical concept that was used to calculate and predict new topological materials for efficient energy conversion. Topological Weyl semimetals are a class of recently discovered semi-metals with band crossings close to the Fermi energy. Yang’s new theoretical concept has led to the prediction and realization of giant responses in several properties: the Nernst effect, that is important for thermoelectric devices; the Hall effect, that is important for Hall sensors and spintronic devices; and quantum optical effects that are important for new types of efficient solar cells. To achieve this goal, Yang developed and implemented a Kubo based formalism using first-principles derived Wannier wave functions. Via high-throughput calculations, he identified a series of materials with predicted properties more than an order of magnitude larger than known materials. The measured transport and optical properties of these materials are in excellent agreement with his predictions, the giant responses based on Weyl crossings. Yang Zhang is a truly extraordinarily talented young scientist, who is brilliant and of high productivity and originality. At the defense of his thesis, he was only 25 years old. He is now performing post-doctoral research at MIT.

    Veronika Sunko’s remarkable PhD research has already been recognized with several awards. The Otto Hahn Medal is another well-deserved accolade. It was awarded for her work on angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy of the delafossite family of layered triangular lattice oxide metals. These remarkable metals have some of the highest conductivities of any known materials, and Veronika's spectroscopic investigations provided deep insight into the reasons why they conduct so well, as well as on exotic magnetic physics involving conduction electrons both in the bulk and on the surface. In addition to her long and growing list of thesis prizes and awards, Veronika has won a prestigious Miller Fellowship from UC Berkeley, providing three years of salary, research and travel funding for post-doctoral research. She will carry this out both at UC Berkeley and at the neighbouring Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, principally in the group of Professor Joseph Orenstein.

    Warmest congratulations to Veronika and Yang for their truly outstanding work!


    Contact for scientific information:

    Veronika.Sunko@cpfs.mpg.de
    vs61@st-andrews.ac.uk

    Yang.Zhang@cpfs.mpg.de
    yzhang11@mit.edu


    Images

    Veronika Sunko and Yang Zhang
    Veronika Sunko and Yang Zhang
    © MPI CPfS
    None


    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists, Scientists and scholars, Students
    Chemistry, Physics / astronomy
    transregional, national
    Contests / awards, Personnel announcements
    English


     

    Veronika Sunko and Yang Zhang


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