Natalie Stingelin
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Born
1973 (age 51–52)
Natalie Stingelin
1973 (age 51–52)
AlmamaterETH Zurich (PhD)
AwardsFellow of the National Academy of Inventors (2021)
Suffrage Science award (2021)
IOM3 Rosenhain Medal (2014)
Suffrage Science award (2021)
IOM3 Rosenhain Medal (2014)
Natalie Stingelin | |
|---|---|
Natalie Stingelin speaks on plastics at the World Economic Forum in 2016 | |
| Born | Natalie Stingelin 1973 (age 51–52) |
| Alma mater | ETH Zurich (PhD) |
| Awards | Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors (2021) Suffrage Science award (2021) IOM3 Rosenhain Medal (2014) |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Plastic electronics Photonics Bioelectronics[1] |
| Institutions | University of Bordeaux Georgia Institute of Technology Imperial College London Philips Research Laboratories University of Cambridge Queen Mary University of London ETH Zurich |
| Thesis | Microstructuring of polymers and polymer-supported matter processes and applications (2001) |
| Doctoral advisor | Paul Smith[2] |
| Website | stingelin-lab lcpo |
Natalie Stingelin (also published under Natalie Stutzmann and Natalie Stingelin-Stutzmann), Fellow of the Materials Research Society and Royal Society of Chemistry (FRSC), is a materials scientist and current chair of the School of Materials Science and Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology (since 2016; chair since 2022),[3] the University of Bordeaux (since 2017) and Imperial College (since 2009).[1][4] She led the European Commission Marie Curie INFORM network and is Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Materials Chemistry C and Materials Advances.