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| Home | Faculty | Research | Graduate Program | Undergraduate Program | Courses | Brookhaven |
Physical Chemistry, Chemical Physics Physical Chemistry is a core discipline whose aims are the
understanding and measurement of chemical phenomena in terms of fundamental
underlying physical principles, and also the application of this understanding
to the development of new technologies and new materials. Physical chemistry
typically enjoys and profits from a close coupling of its theoretical and
experimental components. With several new faculty members in recent years and a
strong connection to Brookhaven National Laboratory and its extraordinary
facilities, Physical Chemistry is a vibrant discipline at Stony Brook. Current
research interests among the faculty cover a broad range from theoretical
statistical mechanics, quantum chemistry and modeling to experimental programs
from nuclear chemistry to polymers, materials, surface science, molecular
dynamics, and spectroscopy. The optional chemical physics track allows students
to focus even more on the fundamental physical aspects of chemistry, and
usually includes courses in the physics department applicable to the
students interest.
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John Alexander Professor. Reactions between complex nuclei.
Benjamin Chu Distinguished Professor. Light-scattering spectroscopy; X-ray scattering; polymer physics; colloid science, DNA electrophoresis; biomedical applications
Benjamin S. Hsiao Professor. Fundamentals of structure, morphology, property and processing relationships in polymers; nanocomposites and biomaterials.
David Hanson Professor. Physical chemistry; learning theory and practice.
Phillip Johnson Professor. Optical molecular spectroscopy.
Roy Lacey Professor. Nuclear Chemistry
George Stell Distinguished Professor. Molecular theory of fluids; transport and thermodynamic properties of fluids.
Jin Wang Assistant Professor.Theoretical biophysics and biophysical chemistry; protein folding; molecular recognition; biomolecular reaction dynamics; single molecules. Michael White Professor. Dynamics and mechanisms of chemical reactions on metal and metallic nanoparticle surfaces important in energy-related, heterogeneous catalysis. Photoinduced surface reactions and electron transfer
Stanislaus Wong Associate Professor. Synthesis and characterization of chemically functionalized nanomaterials (including carbon nanotubes and quantum dots) and one-dimensional nanostructures. Physical, chemical, and biological applications of nanoscience and nanotechnology. Biophysical chemistry. Surface chemistry and reactivity. Optical spectroscopy. Probe and electron microscopies.
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