Professor Teri Odom
Winner: 2020 Centenary Prize
Northwestern University
For seminal work on multi-scale materials that enable new ways to achieve ultrafast, coherent, and directional light emission at the nanoscale.
Celebrate Professor Teri Odom
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Learning the language of different fields — while rooted in chemistry — will enable multiple, unique convergent approaches to solve difficult problems and open new areas of science.
Professor Odom’s group aims to make precious metals more precious by controlling their nanoscale shape and organisation into lattices, resulting in new materials that can interact with light in special ways. For example, they have designed one of the world’s smallest lasers whereby metal nanoparticles can squeeze light into very small volumes that can then be amplified by gain media. This year is the 60-year celebration of the invention of the laser; at the time, the developer stated that the device was a solution seeking a problem. Now however, the laser is ubiquitous, from eye surgery to checkout readers to optical communication. In Professor Odom’s case, she is interested not only understanding how nanolasers work but also their potential in applications, such as non-invasive stimulation of biological processes or imaging diseased tissue.
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