Alan J. Heeger Born: 22-Jan-1936 Birthplace: Sioux City, IA
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Physicist Party Affiliation: Democratic Nationality: United States Executive summary: Metallic polymers American physicist and metallurgist Alan J. Heeger has conducted primary research into semiconducting and metallic polymers, and discovered in 1977 (with Alan G. MacDiarmid and Hideki Shirakawa) that certain plastics can conduct electricity. His work showed that polymers which consist alternately of single and double bonds between the carbon atoms can carry electricity efficiently if the polymers are "doped", meaning that electrons are removed through oxidation or introduced through reduction. Conductive plastics have potential applications in solar cells, as anti-static materials for photographic film, as windows engineered to block sunlight, and as polymer-based light-emitting displays screens for devices from cellular phones to television screens.
Heeger, MacDiarmid, and Shirakawa shared the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2000, and Heeger has conducted related research into conjugating polymers for generation of white light, highly conductive organic solids, light-emitting diodes and electrochemical cells, lasers, and photoluminescence. He has suggested that with financial backing and access to 30 miles of land in the Mojave Desert, he could construct polymer-based solar collectors that "would be able to meet all of America’s energy needs — forever". Father: (store proprietor, b. 1900, d. 1945) Mother: (store proprietor) Brother: Gerald Wife: Ruth (high school sweetheart, m. circa 1957, two sons) Son: Peter (immunologist) Son: David (neuroscientist)
High School: Omaha Central High School, Omaha, NE (1953) University: BS Mathematics and Physics, University of Nebraska (1957) University: PhD Physics, University of California at Berkeley (1961) Lecturer: University of Pennsylvania (1962-64) Teacher: University of Pennsylvania (1964-67) Professor: University of Pennsylvania (1967-82) Administrator: Lab for Research on the Structure of Matter, University of Pennsylvania (1978-81) Professor: Physics, University of California at Santa Barbara (1982-) Administrator: Institute for Polymers and Organic Solids, UC Santa Barbara (1982-) Professor: Materials, University of California at Santa Barbara (1985-)
Guggenheim Fellowship 1968-69 APS Oliver E. Buckley Condensed Matter Prize 1983
John Scott Medal 1989
Balzan Prize 1995 Nobel Prize for Chemistry 2000 (with Alan G. MacDiarmid, Hideki Shirakawa) DuPont Founder and President, UNIAX Corporation (1990-94)
Lockheed Space and Missile Div. (1957-58)
Angeleno Group Board of Advisors
Clipper Windpower Plc Board of Advisors
Konarka Technologies Board of Directors
NGEN Partners, LLC Venture Partner
QTL Biosystems Board of Directors
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellowship, 1963-65 American Physical Society 1968 Korean Academy of Science and Technology Foreign Member, 2001
National Academy of Sciences 2001 Russian Academy of Sciences Foreign Member Democratic National Committee Obama for America Jewish Ancestry Maternal and Paternal
Russian Ancestry Paternal
Author of books:
Semiconducting and Metallic Polymers (2010, with Ebinazar B. Namdas, Niyazi Serdar Sariciftci)
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