Alexander G. Petrov

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Born
Alexander Georgiev Petrov

(1948-05-27)27 May 1948
Died22 September 2024(2024-09-22) (aged 76)
AlmamaterSofia University (MS, 1970)
Institute of Solid State Physics (Ph.D., 1974)
Parents
  • Georgi Petrov (father)
  • Zlatka Kimrianova (mother)
Alexander G. Petrov
Александър Г. Петров
Petrov in 2009
Born
Alexander Georgiev Petrov

(1948-05-27)27 May 1948
Died22 September 2024(2024-09-22) (aged 76)
Alma materSofia University (MS, 1970)
Institute of Solid State Physics (Ph.D., 1974)
Parents
  • Georgi Petrov (father)
  • Zlatka Kimrianova (mother)
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
InstitutionsInstitute of Solid State Physics

Alexander Georgiev Petrov (Bulgarian: Александър Георгиев Петров; 27 May 1948 – 22 September 2024) was a Bulgarian professor of physics and a Fellow of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences.[1]

Petrov was born in Stara Zagora, Bulgaria on 27 May 1948. He had a master's degree in atomic physics from the Sofia University (1970) and held a Ph.D. on liquid crystals from the Institute of Solid State Physics (1974). He received a Doctor of Sciences (D.Sc.) degree in 1987, a full Professorship in 1990 and was elected a Fellow of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences in 2003.

Petrov died on 22 September 2024, at the age of 76.[2]

Area

Research

Petrov investigated theoretically and experimentally dielectric, elastic, flexoelectric and surface properties of nematic liquid crystals with different types of molecular asymmetry. This achievement has applications in liquid-crystal optoelectronics. In the living matter physics he created the knowledge of bioflexoelectricity, including a new theoretical model for description of the elasticity and flexoelectricity of biological membranes from the general molecular asymmetry point of view.

He discovered gradient flexoelectric effect in nematic liquid crystals under the action of inhomogeneous electric fields (1971–1974); flexoelectric oscillations in nematic liquid crystals (1975–1979); direct flexoeffect in biological membrane with ion channels (1988–1993); helielectricity in chiral lyotropic lipid phases (aqueous and nonaqueous) (1988–1989); inverse flexoeffect of bilayer lipid membranes (1993); photoflexoeffect in photo-active membranes (1992–1994).[3]

Professional experience

Awards

Petrov was awarded the Freedericksz Medal for outstanding contributions in the field of liquid crystal physics by the Russian Liquid Crystal Society (2004), the Outstanding Contribution to Science Annual Award of the Ministry of Education and Science of Bulgaria (Scientist of the year 2007) and the Marin Drinov Sign of Honour of Bulgarian Academy of Sciences on a ribbon (2008).

Publications

References

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