David M. Heyes Ph.D.
| Position |
Department / Business Unit |
|
Chemistry |
| Institution |
Disciplines |
| University of Surrey |
Chemistry |
| City |
State / Provence |
| Guildford |
Surrey |
| Country |
Website |
| United Kingdom |
link
|
| Fax |
|
| +44 (0) 1483 686851 |
|
His research interests are understanding and predicting the physical properties of particulate matter such as colloidal liquids and granular systems.
He was awarded a Royal Society University Research Fellowship in 1983 and DSc from Bristol in 1992. In the same year he was appointed Lecturer at the University of Surrey.
Education
Professor Heyes was educated at the Universities of Bristol and Manchester and carried out post doctoral work in the USA and the Netherlands.
|
Related Content
Researchers at University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) have developed a supercapacitor or electrochemical capacitor (EC) composed of an expanded network of graphene — a one-atom-thick layer of graphitic carbon. The team demonstrated excellent mechanical and electrical properties as well as exceptionally high surface area.
As the nanocommunity celebrates the year since the pioneers of graphene won the Nobel Prize, NanoScienceWorks.org speaks with the co-editor of Graphene: Synthesis and Applications. This is first comprehensive book to look at the exciting industrial properties and promises of graphene’s planar sheet. Prof. Wonbong Choi is the Director of Nanomaterials & Device Laboratory at Florida International University’s Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering.
Rice University researchers have found a highly controllable way to attach organic molecules to pristine graphene. The work opens the door for a new class of chemical sensors, thermoelectric devices and metamaterials.
|