Professor A. Marshall Stoneham
A. Marshall Stoneham, Ph.D., CPhys, FInstP, FRS is Emeritus Massey
Professor,
London Centre for Nanotechnology, and Department of Physics and
Astronomy,
University College London.
Marshall also directs the Centre for Materials Research, an
inter-Departmental
network, including most areas of the physical sciences and engineering
(Physics and Astronomy, Chemistry. Geology, Biochemical Engineering,
Chemical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Electrical and Electronic
Engineering), from Departments like Archaeology with special interests,
and from an increasing number of biological and medical
units.
Marshall was awarded the
2006 Guthrie Medal and Prize, which
recognizes exceptional achievements in physics; the award
has been in existence since 1914, and previous
winners include Neils Bohr, Ernest Rutherford, Nevill Mott, Harrie
Massey, Phil Anderson, Rudolf Peierls, and Mike Seaton.
His own background is theoretical physics, especially solid state
theory. For most of his career he was at Harwell, then the major
research
laboratory of the Atomic Energy Authority. When he first went there,
there was a very large basic research program, with a difference —
the
basic research also provided routes to answers to pressing practical
questions.
His own work involved the behavior of defects in
solids, and
led to some of the first self-consistent calculations of defect excited
states, to some of the earliest work in which both the electronic
structure problem and the positions of the ions near the defect were
solved as a consistent problem, and to a quantitative quantum theory of
the diffusion of hydrogen in metals.
Marshall was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1989. In that year,
he was
elected a Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford, where he had been a Wolfson
Industrial Fellow since 1985; he also became Head of Materials Physics
and Metallurgy Division, Harwell. This Division had over 200 staff, with
interests from boron neutron capture therapy as a possible cancer
treatment, to transmutation doping of semiconductor silicon, neural net
methods, and nuclear reactor safety.
In 1990 he became
Director of
Research for AEA Industrial Technology and, soon after. Chief Scientist
of AEA Technology, with responsibilities for science at all AEA
laboratories, from Dounreay in the far north of Scotland to Winfrith,
near the south coast. He continued this role, part-time, for a couple of
years after moving to UCL in 1995. His links with the UKAEA fusion
programme have continued. The review of the European program in 2000,
for which he was the UK representative, was a critical factor leading to
the present “fast track” plans for fusion technology. He is a member
of
the
Fusion Board that advises the Culham programme for EPSRC, and his own
research interests include the special challenges of fusion materials.
Outside UCL, he was recently Editor-in-Chief of
Journal of Physics:
Condensed Matter,
one of the leading journals in its field. He has been a Vice President
of the Institute of Physics, when he chaired the Board of Institute of
Physics Publishing (IoPP), the commercial publishing company and source
of the major part of the IoP’s funds for supporting physics, physicists,
and physics-related activities.
Marshall coauthored
Materials Modification by Electronic Excitation,
and edited
Ionic Solids at High Temperatures (Directions in Condensed Matter
Physics, Vol 2), and coedited
Computational and Mathematical Models of Microstructural Evolution:
Symposium Held April 13–17, 1998, San Francisco, California, U.S.A
(Materials Research Society Symposia Proceedings, V. 529.).
His over 500 papers include
Entanglement of Remote Spins with Unequal Coupling to an Optically
Active Mediator,
Radiation effects in glasses used for immobilization of high-level
waste and plutonium disposition,
Theory of the growth mode for a thin metallic film on
an insulating substrate,
Asymmetry and long-range character of lattice deformation by neutral
oxygen vacancy in α-quartz,
Adhesion trends and growth mode of ultra-thin copper
films on MgO, and
Structure and Spectroscopy of Surface Defects from Scanning Force
Microscopy:
Theoretical Predictions.
Marshall’s main research interests are in theoretical solid state
physics and
materials science. Areas have included (a) the electronic structure of
defects and defect processes, especially those involving excited states
and polaron behavior, (b) properties of surfaces and interfaces,
especially the metal/oxide interface, and silicon oxidation, one of the
central processes in present and future microelectronics, (c)
understanding scanning probe microscopy properly (STM, AFM), and (d)
diamond and diamond films.
However, his major project at
present is in
quantum information technology: he has a large Basic Technologies grant
and the ambition to create solid-state quantum gates that are silicon
compatible and could operate at room temperature. The project has strong
links with his earlier studies of defects and quantum behaviour. He is
also interested in “physics in action” — how basic science helps
technology, and how technology drives new science.
Read
60 seconds with …
Professor Marshall Stoneham, University College London,
UK and
Quantum mechanics may explain how humans smell.