Gerhard Ertl Lecture & Award

Gerhard Ertl Lecture & Award

The Ertl Lecture Award was established in 2008 by the three Berlin universities (Humboldt University, Technical University and Free University) and the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society and is awarded once a year. It commemorates former FHI Director Gerhard Ertl's Nobel Prize in Chemistry, which he received in 2007. The prize honours outstanding personalities and researchers in the field of catalysis where Ertl carried out exceptional research for many decades. The prize, sponsored by BASF, includes a one-week research stay at the participating Berlin institutions and a keynote lecture. The winner is typically announced in Spring, the lecture takes place around the December 10th, the anniversary of Ertl's Nobel Prize reception.

Speaker: Patrick Xian

Towards materials data science – where high-throughput computation will meet high-throughput experimentation

  • Online Seminar
  • Date: Aug 12, 2020
  • Time: 03:30 PM (Local Time Germany)
  • Speaker: Patrick Xian
  • Northwestern University, USA
Constructing a materials discovery platform requires concerted efforts between multiple domains, including theory, experiments and the computational methods for synergetic exchanges in between [1]. Firstly, these exchanges require domain-informed, compact data representations and metrics to facilitate the high-throughput methodology and unite disparate fields associated with materials science. I discuss corresponding examples from electronic structure [2] and crystal structure [3] data. Secondly, existing materials characterization methods are not designed to scale up to macroscopic samples and batches, and the correspondence between multimodal measurements are often not exact [4], I discuss these existing limitations and propose solutions by co-designing experimental and computational workflows [5]. [1] M. Aykol et al. Matter 1, 1 (2019).[2] R. P. Xian, V. Stimper et al. arXiv:2005.10210.[3] C. J. Bartel et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 142, 5135 (2020).[4] T. L. Burnett and P. J. Withers, Nat. Mater. 18, 1041 (2019).[5] M. Du et al. under review. [more]
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