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Harmer Receives Prestigious International Research Award; Germany's Humboldt Research Award to Extend Lehigh's Research Network in Nanotechnology.


BETHLEHEM, Pa. -- Martin Harmer, director of the Center for Advanced Materials Advanced Materials is a leading peer-reviewed materials science journal published every two weeks. Advanced Materials includes Communications, Reviews, and Feature Articles from the cutting edge of materials science, including topics in chemistry, physics,  and Nanotechnology (CAMN) at Lehigh University Lehigh University, at Bethlehem, Pa.; coeducational; chartered and opened 1866 by Asa Packer. It has undergraduate colleges of arts and science, business and economics, and engineering and applied science, as well as several graduate programs. , has been awarded a Humboldt Research Award for senior scientists by Germany's Alexander von Humboldt Foundation The Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (in German Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung) is a foundation of the German government for the promotion of international cooperation in the field of scientific research. See also
  • The Humboldt Prize
.

The international honor, one of the most prestigious given by Germany, recognizes Harmer's lifetime research achievements in materials science and engineering Materials science and engineering

A multidisciplinary field concerned with the generation and application of knowledge relating to the composition, structure, and processing of materials to their properties and uses.
.

Harmer, a professor of materials science and engineering at Lehigh, is world-renowned for his studies of the properties of structural and electronic ceramic materials and their control at the micro- and nanoscale. He is particularly interested in developing novel transparent materials and nanomaterials with multi-functional properties. Currently, he is studying the sintering sintering, process of forming objects from a metal powder by heating the powder at a temperature below its melting point. In the production of small metal objects it is often not practical to cast them.  behavior of nanoparticles of gold and iron oxide The material used to coat the surfaces of magnetic tapes and lower-capacity disks. , and the mechanism of the conversion of polycrystalline Adj. 1. polycrystalline - composed of aggregates of crystals; "polycrystalline metals"
crystalline - consisting of or containing or of the nature of crystals; "granite is crystalline"
 alumina into single crystal sapphire for lighting applications.

As director of Lehigh's CAMN, Harmer leads a variety of projects. In one, a multi-disciplinary team of Lehigh researchers is working with peers from Harvard, Rice, Georgia Tech, UCLA UCLA University of California at Los Angeles
UCLA University Center for Learning Assistance (Illinois State University)
UCLA University of Carrollton, TX and Lower Addison, TX
 and the Illinois Institute of Technology Illinois Institute of Technology, in Chicago; coeducational; founded 1940 by a merger of Armour Institute of Technology (founded 1892) and Lewis Institute (1896).  to study the economic and environmental impact of nanotechnology. The project is supported by a five-year, $1.7- million grant from the Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center of the National Science Foundation.

"The real power of nano is evident when it supports discovery and innovation in other areas - areas such as medicine, computing, materials, and environmental engineering," says Harmer.

Lehigh has one of the top electron microscopy centers in the U.S., Harmer notes, and has for more than 30 years hosted the world's foremost annual microscopy short courses.

"Our facilities provide us with unmatched capability in nanocharacterization, " he says. "But it is when these facilities support adjacent research interests - the search for more effective methods to target drugs directly at tumors, the efforts to remove harmful pollutants from ground water - that the possibilities and significance of nanoscale engineering really take shape."

The Humboldt Award, which is worth about $60,000, will fund Harmer's research into the basic science of novel heat treatment (sintering) processes for growing new types of single crystal and multilayer ceramic materials with enhanced performance characteristics for applications such as laser lighting, medical ultrasound imaging and more efficient diesel engines.

The Humboldt Research Award for senior scientists is presented each year to a maximum of 100 top international researchers in engineering, humanities and the natural and physical sciences. It enables foreign academics to conduct research at German research institutions with researchers from Germany and from the rest of the world. Recipients are nominated by leading German scholars and have five years to use the award.

Harmer, a fellow of the American Ceramic Society The American Ceramic Society (ACerS) is a non-profit professional organization for the ceramics community, with a focus on scientific research, emerging technologies, and current applications in which ceramic materials are a key element.  and a member of the European Academy of Sciences, was awarded the Sc. D. from Leeds University (England) in recognition of lifetime contributions to science. He has published more than 200 articles and has been cited more than 2,000 times in articles by other researchers. In 2002, he was named a "Highly Cited Researcher" by the Institute for Scientific Information.

About Lehigh University

For 141 years, Lehigh University (www.lehigh.edu) has combined outstanding learning opportunities with leadership in innovative research. Lehigh is among the nation's most selective, highly ranked private research universities. Its four colleges -Arts and Sciences, Business and Economics, Education and the P.C. Rossin College of Engineering and Applied Science - provide opportunities to 6,500 students to discover and grow in a learning community that promotes interdisciplinary programs with real-world experience. Lehigh is located in Pennsylvania's Lehigh Valley in Bethlehem, Pa., about 50 miles north of Philadelphia and 75 miles west of New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
.
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Date:May 2, 2006
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