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"Stanford R. Ovshinsky" Award
was founded in 2001, with the aim to recognize the great achievements in the field of chalcogenides. This year the award was confered during the IV-th edition of theRomanian Conference on Advanced Materials (ROCAM-2003), held in Constantza, Romania, September 15-19, 2003.

More about Stanford R. Ovshinsky...


   This year the winners of the award were Prof. Punit Boolchand from the University of Cincinnati, USA and Prof. Koichi Shimakawa from the Gifu University, Japan.

 

The speech of dr. Mihai A Popescu during the awarding ceremony:

   "Dear Colleagues,

 

   The first Stanford R. Ovshinsky Award for Excellence in Non-Crystalline Chalcogenides has been conferred in 2001, during the First International Workshop on Amorphous and Nanostructured Chalcogenides, held in Bucharest, 25-28 June 2001. The winners of the Award have been, ex aequo, Prof. Stephen R. Elliott from the University of Cambridge (UK) and Prof. Keiji Tanaka from the Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan. The second Ovshinsky Award has been confered in 2002, during the International Symposium on Non-Oxide Glasses, ISNOG-13, held in Pardubice, Czech Republic, September 9-12, 2002. The winners of the Award have been, ex aequo, Prof. Victor Lyubin from Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel and Dr. Alexander Kolobov, from National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Tsukuba, Japan, and A.F. Joffe Physico-Technical Institute, Sankt Petersburg, Russia.

   This year the Stanford R. Ovshinsky Award for Excellence in Non-Crystalline Chalcogenides is conferred during the Fourth Edition of the Romanian Conference on Advanced Materials, that is held here in Constanta, Romania. The Conference Organizers, Prof. H. Alexandru from the University of Bucharest and Prof. V. Ciupina from University "Ovidius" Constanta kindly accepted to organize the Awarding Ceremony here in Constanta and invited the winners to participate to the Conference ROCAM-2003 and to give lectures. The candidates for the Award for 2003 were proposed by outstanding specialists in the field of chalcogenide glasses.

   The following personalities accepted to be members of the Jury and have sent proposals for candidates:

  1. P. Boolchand
  2. D. Drabold
  3. S.R. Elliott
  4. M. Frumar
  5. M. Iovu
  6. H. Jain
  7. A. Kolobov
  8. A. Kovalskii
  9. J. Lucas
  10. G. Lucovsky
  11. V. M. Lyubin
  12. V. Minaev
  13. M. Mitkova
  14. D. Nesheva
  15. K. Petkov
  16. M. Poulain
  17. K. Richardson
  18. K. Shimakawa
  19. O. Shpotyuk
  20. Ke. Tanaka
  21. P. C. Taylor
  22. L. Tichy
  23. S. Tripathi
  24. E. Vateva
  25. S. Yannopoulos

 

   Stan Ovshinsky validated the winners of the Ovshinsky Award for Excellence in Non-Crystalline Chalcogenides for the year 2003 (ex-aequo):

Prof. Punit Boolchand from the University of Cincinnati, USA

 

 

 

and

 

Prof. Koichi Shimakawa from the Gifu University, Japan.

 

 

 

    Dr. Alexander Kolobov will present to you the winners and will hand the diploma signed by Prof. R. Grigorovici.

    I congratulate the winners and I ask them to give the traditional lectures with this occasion."

Prof. Dr. Mihai Popescu

Constanta, September 17, 2003

The speech of dr. Alexander Kolobov, the chairman of the awarding ceremony:

 

   "It was 50 years ago that Professors N.A. Goryunova and B.T. Kolomiets of the A.F. Ioffe Physico-Technical Institute in Leningrad discovered that some semiconductive ternary chalcogenide materials were amorphous. While nobody seems to be surprised at this fact nowadays, the discovery was highly unusual. Indeed, the fact that chalcogenide glasses were semiconductors meant that they possessed valence and conduction bands separated by a forbidden gap.

   It is worth reminding that the concept of the gap is quite sophisticated, entirely dependent on quantum mechanics, and was introduced for solids in the 1930s by the pioneering work of Bloch, Peierls and Wilson. The theory was based on an assumption that the material was crystalline, i.e. possessed long-range order (evidenced, for example by sharp Bragg reflections). Glasses do not exhibit sharp Bragg reflections, i.e. do not possess long-range periodicity. How can they then possess a band structure similar to that of homologous crystals? This discovery opened up a new field in solid state physics and chemistry - amorphous semiconductors - a field that has been recently very actively developing.

   In the years that followed, significant progress has been made in both understanding the physics and chemistry of the various processes taking place in amorphous ssemiconductors and their practical applications. While the former is more appealing for most physicists and chemists, it is the latter that drives research. On the application side, the major achievements were in in the development of amorphous silicon solar cells and thin-film transistors used, for example, in flat panel displays, and the use of chalcogenides in phase-change optical memories. The latter application was suggested by Professor S.R. Ovshinsky in the late 1960s which made him one of the fathers of the new field.

   Two years ago, in order to commemorate the most significant contributions into both the physics and technology of amorphous chalcogenides the prestigious S.R. Ovshinsky Award was established. The first Awardees were Professors S.R. Elliott from Cambridge University (UK) and Keiji Tanaka from Hokkaido University (Japan). In 2002 two more people achieved this honour - Professor V.M. Lyubin from the Ben-Gurion University (Israel) and Dr A.V. Kolobov from the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (Japan). It is worth noting that both awardees for the year 2002, despite working now in different countries, originally worked in the laboratory headed by Professor B.T. Kolomiets and this award should also be considered as a high evaluation by the international community of the contribution of the Leningrad school. Another year has passed and this prestigious award has been conferred on two more scientists. Prof. P. Boolchand of the University of Cincinnati (USA) and Prof. K. Shimakawa of Gifu University (Japan) joined the ranks of those whose contributions have been evaluated as outstanding. The award has become truly international and this undoubtedly manifests the importance of the field for modern science and technology.

 

   It is my pleasure and honour to introduce this year's winners. Professor Punit Boolchand, the first co-winner, obtained his M.S. degree from Punjab University and PhD from Case-Western University and has worked for most of his career at the University of Cincinnati. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society. Prof. Boolchand demonstrates an enviable expertise in many different experimental techniques. Furthermore - he has and is continuing to creatively develop existing methods to provide new insights into experimental studies. Very impressive examples are the facts that he introduced tin MЖssbauer spectroscopy as a tool to elucidate the structure of Ge-centered local units in glasses, applied the methods of Modulated Differential Scanning Calorimetry for examining the fine details in the thermal behavior of glasses and thus obtained rich information about their molecular structure, particularly microscopic phase separation.

   Very important is that he not only collect experimental results from various methods but also coherently analyzes them, and provides simple and direct conclusions which often yield new insights on molecular structures and the origin of glass formation. His recent work on self-organization effects in glasses is likely to have broad consequences in various fields.

   Another important contribution of Prof. P. Boolchand into the field is a recently edited book "Insulating and Semiconducting Glasses" (2000). I personally very much like the manner in which Professor Boolchand presents his results - in a very quiet but most persuasive voice.

 

   Prof. Koichi Shimakawa, the second co-winner, was born in Tokyo during WWII. This may have influenced his choice of a very peaceful career. He graduated in Engineering from Nagoya University in 1970 and has since continuously worked at Gifu University with a couple of European detours (Leicester in 1981 and Glasgow in 1987). His major interest is in comparative studies of photo-induced phenomena in chalcogenide glasses and hydrogenated amorphous silicon.

   Some of his findings are summarized in a monograph "Advances in Amorphous Semiconductors" (2003) co-authored by Prof. J. Singh. I have had the privilege of being his friend for over 10 years and had the pleasure of writing several papers together. It should also be mentioned that Professor K. Shimakawa is a very artistic person, one of his passionate hobbies being opera.

 

   Professors P. Boolchand and K. Shimakawa have rightfully received this prestigious award conferred on them by the international chalcogenide community.

 

Congratulations!"

Dr. Alexander Kolobov

 

  


 

 

"Stanford R. Ovshinsky" Award was founded in 2001, with the aim to recognize the great achievements in the field of chalcogenides. , 

 

More about Stanford R. Ovshinsky...

Since then, the winners of the award Prize were:

2001  Prof. Stephen R. Elliott (Cambridge University, UK) and Prof. Keiji Tanaka (Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan)

2002  Prof. Victor Lyubin (Ben-Gurion University, Negev, Israel) and Dr. Alexander Kolobov (National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Tsukuba, Japan)

2003  Prof. Punit Boolchand (University of Cincinnati, USA) and Prof. Koichi Shimakawa (Gifu University, Japan)

2004  Prof. Hellmut Fritzsche (James Franck Institute, Chicago, USA) and Prof. Mihai Popescu (Institute of Materials Physics, Bucharest, Romania)

2005  Prof. Andrei Andriesh (Academy of Sciences of Moldova, Chisinau, Moldova)

2006  Prof. Miloslav Frumar (University of Pardubice, Czech Republic)

2007  Prof. Matthias Wuttig (I. Physikalisches Institut der RWTH Aachen, Germany)

2008  Prof. Annie Pradel (University of Montpellier II, France)

2009  Prof. Matthieu Micoulaut (Universite Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France)

2010  Prof. Noboru Yamada (Panasonic, Japan)

2012  Prof. Gerald Lucovsky (North Carolina State University, USA)