Dr. James K. Gimzewski
Dr. James K. Gimzewski, Ph.D., Ph.D. hc, FRS, CPhys, FIoN, FInstP,
FWIF,
FREng is a Professor in the
Department of Chemistry
and
Biochemistry at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA),
Member
of the Executive Board of the
California Nanosystems Institute
(CNSI-UCLA) and Codirector of the
Center for Social Interfaces &
Networks Advanced Programming Simulations & Environments (SINAPSE),
UCLA.
He was on the Scientific Advisory Board of the 2004 and 2005
Nobel Symposiums
on
Controlled
Nanoscale Motion in Biological and Artificial Systems, Stockholm,
Sweden.
Throughout his twenty-three year career in Nanotechnology he has been
actively involved in promoting science and technology to the public. He
has worked with Industrial and Government organizations in Switzerland,
the UK, US, European Union and Japan on issues relating to
Nanotechnology.
Since 1983, he led a Nanotechnology group at the
IBM Corporate Research
Laboratories in Zurich, Switzerland, for 21 years, and he is
internationally recognized as a pioneer in Nanotechnology
research.
Jim has received numerous awards for his work in
Nanotechnology, including the
1997 Feynman Prize in Nanotechnology, the
1997 The Discover Award for Emerging Fields, the
1998 ‘Wired 25’
Award
from Wired magazine, and the
2001 Institute of Physics’ “Duddell” prize and
medal for his work in Nanoscale science. Additionally, he holds
many awards from IBM, including two IBM “Outstanding Innovation Awards”.
He is recognized by the
Guinness Book of Records for the world’s smallest
calculator.
He is a cofounder of the
Institute of Nanotechnology, UK and served as a
member of the board and chairman of its European advisory board. He has
served on the board of reviewing editors of
Science and the editorial
board of
Nanotechnology, as well as the
Nanotechnology Opportunity
Report
by CMP Cientifica, which publishes state-of-the-art analysis of
nanotechnology companies and organizations.
Jim was elected Fellow to the
Royal Academy of Engineering for his research in engineering nanotechnology in 2001,
and
he is an elected Fellow of the
Institute of Physics, Fellow of the
World Innovation Foundation, and
Fellow of the
Royal Society.
His professional work includes board memberships of the
Advisory Group of
the International Review of Physics, UK Government; he was a member
of
the Advisory Group on Nanotechnology – Office of Science & Industry,
Department of Trade and Industry, (DTI) UK. He was an expert witness for
the Nanoscale and Technology Outlook: 20 Years, UK Government, Department
of Trade and Industry, London, UK. He was a steering committee board
member of the National Research Program (NRP) “Molecular Devices and
Supramolecular Structures” in Switzerland, and he is a Member of the
Evaluation Committee for the
NRIM Center of Excellence Development
Project in Japan. He also served on the board of six European
research
programs in Nanotechnology.
Jim directed many international conferences on
nanotechnology, including two
NASA Advanced Study Institutes in 1993 and
1995, the first ever industrial workshop on Nanotechnology in Davos,
Switzerland in 1991, and a US-Japan Conference in 2002 at
UCLA.
He has joined the scientific boards of several nanotechnology companies,
including
Veeco-DI Instruments,
Quantum Precision Instruments and the
Kentucky Initiative in Nanometer Scale Science and
Technology.
Jim is a co-director of
NANO, an interactive exhibit
comprised of nine installations that present Nanotechnology using a
hybrid of art and science that spans 10,000 square feet of exhibition
space. The installation started in December 2003 and ran until September
2004, at
LACMALab, Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The exhibition attracted over 100,000 people from all walks of life in the Los
Angeles area, including organized groups of school children, and it has
spawned NANO related activities such as NexGen’s Nano night, nano
fashion shows and modern dance all focused around issues of
Nanotechnology and Society.
With over 180 papers published and more than 200 invited international
talks, Jim’s research continues to appear in journals,
such as Science, and Nature.
Approximately 300 press articles reporting highlights of his work have
appeared in various print media including Nature, Science, Scientific
American, The Economist, The New York Times, The Wall St Journal, The
London Times, Financial Times, New Scientist, Discover Magazine,
Smithsonian Magazine, and the Los Angeles Times. He was featured on the
cover story of LA Weekly.
TV programs and radio interviews on his work have been broadcast in the
US, Europe and Japan, as well as on BBC World Services, CNN
International, Deutschland Radio, ABC Radio, etc. He was featured in a
program on Nanotechnology for BBC Television in “The Next Big Thing”. He
was a guest panelist twice on NPR’s “Science Friday”, where he discussed
emerging trends in nanotechnology.
Jim earned a B.Sc. with Honors in Pure Chemistry,
University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
in 1974 and a Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry,
University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland, UK in 1977.
He conducts his research in a
specially constructed
Nanotechnology Laboratory at UCLA, where he directs
a group of 14 researchers. He lives in Santa Monica, with his wife and
three children who were created using advanced self-replicating
nanotechnology.