Dr. Arthur J. Yang, President and Chief Technical
Officer Before founding ISTN, Dr. Yang was Technical Director
of Armstrong Insulation Product Research, where he led an R&D team
of 25 people specializing in flexible foam insulation research. While
at Armstrong, Dr. Yang won an Advanced Technology Program (ATP) grant
from NIST in 1992 to develop nanopore thermal insulation using silica
sol-gel chemistry, one of the first government grants ever awarded for
the commercialization of a nanotechnology-enabled product. Dr. Yang
is an Adjunct Professor in Chemical Engineering at the University of
Maryland's A. James Clark School of Engineering and a Guest Scientist
at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). He also
serves on the Department of Energy's Center of Excellence for the Synthesis
and Processing of Advanced Materials. Dr. Yang has a Ph.D. in Physical
Chemistry from Brown University, where he was awarded the Potter Prize
in Chemistry for having the most outstanding thesis in his Ph.D. class.
Dr. Claude Cohen Dr. Cohen
is a Professor of Chemical Engineering at Cornell University and
served as Director of the School of Chemical Engineering from
1990 to 1993. His current research interests include structures
and properties of elastomers, light scattering of polymers and
suspensions, and soil remediation using amphiphilic polyurethane
(APU) nano-network polymer particles to remove hydrophobic pollutants.
He was a recipient of the DuPont Young Faculty Award in 1978.
He has also served as a Visting Scientist at IBM's Almaden Research
Center and recipient of The Sandy and Russell Rosen Lectureship
in Chemical Engineering (Technion Haifa, Israel). Dr. Cohen has
authored and co-authored over 80 publications. Before arriving
at Cornell, Dr. Cohen worked a Katzir-Katchalsky Fellow at the
Weizmann Institute in Israel, a Research Associate at the California
Institute of Technology, and a Postdoctoral Fellow at Brown University.
He received his Ph.D. from Princeton University.
Dr. Gregory W. Exarhos
- Dr. Exarhos is a Laboratory Fellow and directs the Materials
Chemistry Research Group at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
(PNNL). He also is the Program Coordinator for the suite of basic
materials science research projects at the laboratory and coordinates
multidisciplinary programs on tailored nanostructures and smart
materials supported through two DOE Centers for Materials Synthesis
and Processing. Dr. Exarhos is a member of the Board of Directors
of the American Vacuum Society and has chaired the AVS National
Meeting and National AVS Symposium. He has also chaired the International
Conference on Metallurgical Coatings and Thin Films and Annual
Symposium on Optical Materials for High Power Lasers. He is also
an Adjunct Professor of Physics at Washington State University,
a Fellow of the American Ceramic Society, and a member of the
editorial board for a variety of publications. During his career,
Dr. Exarhos has authored over 170 technical papers and books as
well as six patents. He has received IR&D 100 and Federal
Laboratory Consortium awards relating to thin film materials and
advanced materials processing. Prior to assuming his current position,
he was on the faculty of the Chemistry Department at Harvard University,
where he directed research involving spectroscopic characterization
of redox processes at oxide surfaces, ion transport in oxides,
and development of radar absorbing coatings. He received his Ph.D.
in Physical Chemistry from Brown University.
Dr. Charles C. Han –
Dr. Han is a Professor and Chairman of the State Key Laboratory
of Polymer Physics and Chemistry in Beijing, China. He is one
of the worlds leading scientists in the field of polymer
physics. His current research interests include application of
various scattering techniques (light, small angle neutron, small
angle x-ray) in polymer research, domain structures and order-disorder
transition of block copolymers, morphology and property control
of polymer blends and block copolymers, phase separation and polymer
processing. Previously, he was a Fellow in the Polymers Division
of NIST. He has won numerous awards for his work in polymer physics,
including Gold, Silver and Bronze Medals from the U.S. Department
of Commerce, the American Physical Societys Dillon Medal,
NISTs Samuel Wesley Stratton Award for Best Research, and
the American Physical Societys High Polymer Physics Prize.
He received his Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from the University
of Wisconsin, Madison.
Dr. Dale W. Schaefer Dr. Schaefer
is a Professor of Material Science and Engineering at the University
of Cincinnati and also serves as Director of UC's Polymer Research
Center. He is a pioneer in the characterization of nanostructured
materials using techniques such as light scattering, neutron scattering
and x-ray scattering and possesses strong expertise in carbon
nanotubes, in-situ composites, and porous materials. Before arriving
at Cincinnati, Dr. Schaefer was a Manager in several different
departments at Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico, including
Industry and Government Liaison, Materials Research for Energy
and Environmental Technologies, and Organic and Electronic Materials
Department. He was also a Senior Technical Advisor to the U.S.
Department of Energy and member of the Secretary of Energys
Advisory Board. Prior to joining Sandia, Dr. Schaefer worked as
a Senior Research Associate at IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research
Center in Yorktown Heights, NY and a Postdoctoral Fellow at the
Massachussetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He received his
Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from MIT.