Lianzhou Wang
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lianzhou Wang FAA is a Chinese Australian materials scientist and professor in the School of Chemical Engineering at the University of Queensland. He is director of the Nanomaterials Centre (Nanomac) and a senior group member at the Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology at the University of Queensland, as well as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry.
Wang attended Shandong Polytechnic University in China, where he received a bachelor's degree in materials science and engineering in 1993. He went on to earn a master's degree in materials science and engineering in 1996 from Nanjing University of Technology, China. He married his wife in 1997 and had children.
In 1999, Wang received a PhD in materials science from the Shanghai Institute of Ceramics at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Career
In 1999, Wang was awarded a Japan Science and Technology Agency (STA) Fellowship to undertake research at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) in Nagoya, Japan, where he investigated low-dimensional semiconductor nanomaterials. In 2001, he was recruited to the National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS) in Tsukuba, Japan, to undertake a postdoctoral fellowship with Takayoshi Sasaki, where he conducted innovative research on the synthesis and characterisation of layered materials and two-dimensional semiconductor nanosheets.[1][2][3]
In 2004, Wang was recruited to the ARC Centre of Excellence for Functional Nanomaterials led by Max Lu at the University of Queensland (UQ) in Australia, where, in 2006, he received an Australian Research Council (ARC) Queen Elizabeth II Fellowship and commenced leadership of a multidisciplinary program on self-assembled nanostructures for energy conversion applications. In 2007, he was appointed as a senior lecturer at UQ's School of Chemical Engineering.
In 2010, Wang was appointed as an associate professor in the School of Chemical Engineering and full professor in 2012. Also in 2012, he became director of the Nanomaterials Centre (Nanomac)[4] at the University of Queensland and a Senior Group Leader at the Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology.
Wang is a fellow of Royal Society of Chemistry, as well as a member of the executive committees of the Australian Nanotechnology Network and the National Committee for Materials Science and Engineering of the Australian Academy of Science (AAS). He was appointed as a panel member of the ARC College of Experts in 2016–2018. In 2022, he was elected a foreign member of the Academia Europaea.[5]