Angus Kirkland

British microscopist (born 1965) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Angus Ian Kirkland FInstP FRSC FRMS HonFRMS (born August 1965)[2][non-primary source needed] is the JEOL Professor of Electron Microscopy at the Department of Materials, University of Oxford.[3] Professor Kirkland specialises in High-resolution transmission electron microscopy and Scanning transmission electron microscopy.[4][5]

Born
Angus Ian Kirkland

August 1965 (age 60)
KnownforExit-wave restoration[1]
Quick facts Born, Education ...
Professor
Angus Kirkland
Born
Angus Ian Kirkland

August 1965 (age 60)
EducationUniversity of Cambridge (MA, Ph.D)
Known forExit-wave restoration[1]
Scientific career
FieldsElectron microscopy
HRTEM
STEM
InstitutionsUniversity of Oxford
Rosalind Franklin Institute
Diamond Light Source
University of Cambridge
ThesisHigh resolution electron microscopic studies of colloidal metal particles. (1989)
Doctoral advisorProfessor P P Edwards FRS
Notable studentsSarah Haigh
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Early life and education

Research and career

Kirkland continued at Cavendish Laboratory as post-doctoral fellow until he became Senior Research Associate. He was later elected the Ramsay Memorial Trust Research Fellow.

He then moved to the Department of Materials, University of Oxford where he has led Oxford Electron Image Analysis Group since 2003.[8][9] He was appointed as professor in 2005, and became the JEOL Professor of Electron Microscopy in 2011.[3][9] He was the co-director of the University of Oxford’s David Cockayne Centre.[10][9]

Kirkland research focuses on developing new quantitative techniques for ultra high-resolution electron microscopy, and new imaging detectors. His research also include developing analysis and simulation.[11][12] He researches nanomaterials inorganic oxides structure and surfaces. The development of new detectors, e.g., Transmission Electron Aberration-Corrected Microscope.[13][7][14] Angus Kirkland has an illustrious career with publications in Nature[15][16][14] and Science.[17][18] He led collaborations and grants valued in £million.[19][20]

As of November 2022, he is the Science Director at the Rosalind Franklin Institute[7][21] and the electron Physical Science Imaging Centre (ePSIC) at Diamond Light Source.[6] He is also the Editor-in-Chief of Ultramicroscopy.[22]

Awards and honours

Kirkland is a Fellow of the Institute of Physics (FInstP), the Royal Society of Chemistry (FRSC), and the Royal Microscopical Society (FRMS).[6][7]. In 2025 he was elected to an honorary Fellowship of the Royal Microscopical Society (HonFRMS).

Kirkland was awarded the Microscopy Society of America Award for the best paper published (2005).[23] In 2015, he was awarded the Harald Rose Distinguished Lecture Prize and in 2016 the Quadrennial Prize of the European Microscopy Society.[24] He also received the RMS Alan Agar Medal in 2017.[25][26]

In 2012, Kirkland was appointed as an Honorary Professor at the centre of HRTEM, Nelson Mandela University, South Africa.[6][27]

Kirkland was awarded an honorary Fellowship by the Royal Microscopical Society in 2025.[28]

Selected publications

References

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