Ilke Arslan | |
Birth Place: | Turkey |
Workplaces: | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory University of California, Davis University of Cambridge Argonne National Laboratory Sandia National Laboratories |
Alma Mater: | University of California, Davis University of Illinois Chicago |
Thesis Title: | Atomic scale characterization of threading dislocations in GaN |
Thesis Url: | http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/57773910 |
Thesis Year: | 2004 |
Ilke Arslan is a Turkish American microscopist who is Director of the Center for Nanoscale Materials and the Nanoscience and Technology division at Argonne National Laboratory. She was awarded the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers in 2009 and appointed to the Oppenheimer Science and Energy Leadership Program in 2019.
Arslan was an undergraduate student at the University of Illinois Chicago, with a major in physics and a minor in Spanish.[1] [2] She spent several months of her undergraduate study studying in Spain.[3] Arslan holds a doctorate in physics from the University of California, Davis.[4] She worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Cambridge. Arslan was supported by the Royal Society and the National Science Foundation. She eventually moved to the Sandia National Laboratories, where she worked as a Truman Fellow. Her work considered nano materials for energy and hydrogen storage. She worked on electron tomography, which she believed could help elucidate structure-property-activity relationships.[5]
In 2008, Arslan joined the faculty at the University of California, Davis.[6] After meeting Barack Obama at the ceremony for the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers in 2010, she became increasingly interested in big science that could only be performed at National Laboratories. She was appointed a senior scientist at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in 2011, where she investigated the morphological changes that occur when zeolites are used in Fischer–Tropsch processes. In particular, she explored how the distribution of cobalt changes as materials are reduced. She showed that some cobalt can move several nanometers onto the outside of the alumina support.[7]
In 2017, Arslan joined the Argonne National Laboratory.[8] Her first job involved working as a group leader in electron microscopy, with a particular focus on 3D in situ imaging.[9] She was made Director of the Center for Nanoscale Materials in 2020.