Yue Qi
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California Institute of Technology
Yue Qi | |
|---|---|
| Citizenship | United States |
| Education | Tsinghua University California Institute of Technology |
| Known for | Molecular Modelling |
| Awards | Feynman Prize in Nanotechnology |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Materials science |
| Institutions | California Institute of Technology, General Motors Research Laboratories, Michigan State University, Brown University |
Yue Qi is a Chinese-born American nanotechnologist and physicist who specializes in computational materials scientist at Brown University. She won the 1999 Feynman Prize in Nanotechnology for Theory along with William Goddard and Tahir Cagin for "work in modeling the operation of molecular machine designs."[1]
Qi graduated from Tsinghua University with a double B.S. in materials science and computer science in 1996. As a graduate student in William Goddard's laboratory at the California Institute of Technology, she worked on molecular modelling, including in nanowires and binary liquid metals.[2] She earned her Ph.D. in materials science in 2001. Her dissertation was entitled "Molecular dynamics (MD) studies on phase transformation and deformation behaviors in FCC metals and alloys."[3]