Peter Mark Memorial Award Explained

This Peter Mark Memorial Award was established in 1979 by American Vacuum Society "To recognize outstanding theoretical or experimental work by a young scientist or engineer."[1]

YearRecipientAffiliationCitation
1980Christopher R. Brundle
1981Lawrence L. Kazmerski
1982Charles W. Magee
1983James Chadi
1984Barbara J. Garrison
1985Franz J. Himpsel
1986Richard A. Gottscho
1987Raymond T. Tung
1988Jerry Tersoff
1989Randall M. Feenstra
1990Stephen M. Rossnagel
1991William J. Kaiser
1992
1993Robert J. Hamers
1994Marjorie OlmsteadUniversity of WashingtonFor elucidating the nature of semiconductor surfaces and the heteroepitaxial growth of insulating materials on these surfaces.
1995Emily Carter
1996Brian E. Bent
1997Brian S. Swartzentruber
1998David G. Cahill
1999Eray S. Aydil
2000Stacey F. Bent
2001Eli Rotenberg
2002Rachel S. Goldman
2003Charles H. Ahn
2004Kathryn W. Guarini
2005Jane P. Chang
2006Mark C. Hersam"For outstanding contributions to the development of silicon-based molecular electronics."
2007W.M.M. Kessels
2008Sergei KalininFor pioneering work in the area of nanoelectromechanics and local properties at surfaces
2009Beatriz Roldan CuenyaUniversity of Central FloridaFor pioneering contributions to the understanding of processes taking place in metal nanocluster-catalyzed chemical reactions
2010Arutiun Ehiasarian
2011Mohan Sankaran
2012E. Charles H. SykesFor pioneering atomic-scale studies of chirality, catalysis, and molecular rotation.
2013Daniel GunlyckeFor significant contributions to the understanding of the electronic properties of low-dimensional graphene nanostructures.
2014Joshua ZideUniversity of DelawareFor pioneering work in the growth and characterization of novel electronic and photonics materials.
2015Petro MaksymovychOak Ridge National LaboratoryFor high level frontier chemical and physical contributions to nanoscience.

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: AVS - Peter Mark Memorial Award. AVS. 3 September 2013.