Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Marin Soljačić

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Residence
  
U.S.

Doctoral advisor
  
Mordechai Segev

Role
  
Physicist

Name
  
Marin Soljacic

Nationality
  
Croat


Marin Soljacic httpswwwmacfoundorgmediaphotossoljacicmar

Born
  
February 7, 1974 (age 50) Zagreb, Yugoslavia (present-day Croatia) (
1974-02-07
)

Institutions
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Alma mater
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Known for
  
WiTricity, Nonlinear optics

Notable awards
  
Adolph Lomb Medal (2005) TR35 (2006) MacArthur Fellowship (2008) Blavatnik Award for Young Scientists (2014)

Education
  
Princeton University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Awards
  
MacArthur Fellowship, TR35

Fields
  
Physicist, Electrical engineering

Physicist marin soljacic on photonic crystals


Marin Soljačić (born February 7, 1974) is a Croatian-American physicist and electrical engineer known for wireless non-radiative energy transfer.

Contents

Marin soljacic canceling waves enable new kind of light trapping


Biography

Marin Soljačić was born in Zagreb in 1974. After graduating from XV Gymnasium (MIOC) in Zagreb he attended MIT, where he got his BSc in physics and electrical engineering in 1996. In 1998 he got his MSc from Princeton University and in 2000 he got his PhD in Physics. In 2005 he became a professor of Physics at MIT. In 2008, he was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship.

Work

In 2007 Marin Soljačić and his assistants successfully made the first efficient non-radiative power transfer at a distance of 2 meters turning on a 60 W light bulb. Energy transfer was 40% efficient. Professor Soljačić's experiments and work in wireless energy transfer are related in spirit to the work of Nikola Tesla in the early 20th century, but also have significant differences: unlike Tesla's long-range wireless energy transfer in Colorado, the Soljačić group focuses only on short-range transfer, and unlike Tesla coils which resonantly transfer power with electric fields (which couple strongly to surrounding matter, most famously inducing artificial lightning) the Soljačić proposal uses coupling primarily via magnetic fields. This work is currently being pursued in Soljačić's WiTricity company. Soljačić believes that low-power commercial application of this technology, such as charging of mobile phones, is several years away.

In addition to wireless energy transfer, Prof. Soljačić works on numerous problems on electromagnetism in materials structured on the scale of the wavelength, such as micro- and nano-structured materials for infrared and visible light, including nonlinear optical devices and surface plasmons. His recent research, supported by a US$20 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy, focuses on use of photonic crystals in solar cells.

References

Marin Soljačić Wikipedia