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Timothy M. Swager

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Citizenship
  
American

Doctoral advisor
  
Nationality
  
American

Awards
  
Lemelson–MIT Prize


Born
  
Timothy Manning Swager July 1, 1961 (age 55)Sheridan Montana (
1961-07-01
)

Education
  
Thesis
  
Precursor routes to conducting polymers from the ring-opening metathesis polymerization of cyclic olefins. (1988)

Residence
  
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

Fields
  
Chemistry, Materials Science, Polymer

Academic advisors
  
Robert H. Grubbs, Mark S. Wrighton

Similar
  
Robert H Grubbs, Mark S Wrighton, Richard R Schrock, Yves Chauvin

2009 powell lecture timothy m swager


Timothy M. Swager (born 1961) is an American Scientist and the John D. MacArthur Professor of Chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the director of the Deshpande Center for Technological Innovation. His research is at the interface of chemistry and materials science, with specific interests in carbon nanomaterials, polymers, and liquid crystals. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Contents

Career and Research

A native of Sheridan Montana, Swager earned his B.S. in Chemistry from Montana State University, received a Ph.D. from the California Institute of Technology working with Robert H. Grubbs, and performed postdoctoral studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology under Mark S. Wrighton. He began as an Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvania in 1990 and returned to MIT in 1996 as a Full Professor. Swager is best known for advancing new chemical sensing concepts based on molecular electronic principles. He introduced the concepts of charge and energy transport through molecular and nanowires as a method to create amplified signals to chemical events. These methods gave rise to the sensitive explosive sensors that have been commercialized under the trade name Fido. He demonstrated the integration of molecular recognition into chemiresistive sensors, first with conducting polymers and later with carbon nanotubes, and these methods were commercialized by C2Sense.

Swager also has pioneering contributions to the areas of liquid crystals demonstrating how novel molecular shapes can be used to introduce intermolecular correlations in structures and alignment. In the area of high strength materials, by creating interlocking structures with enhanced ductility and strength. In carbon nanomaterials he has developed methods for functionalizing and/or dispersing graphenes and carbon nanotubes. Also he has designed novel radical materials in collaboration with Robert G. Griffin (MIT) for dynamic nuclear polarization to enhance the signal to noise ratio in NMR experiments. A number of these enhancement agents are commercially available from DyNuPol Corp. Swager has published more than 400 peer reviewed manuscripts and has more than 70 issued patents.

Notable Awards

2016 Linus Pauling Award

2016 Gustavus John Esselen Award for Chemistry in the Public Interest

2013 Award for Creative Invention, American Chemical Society

2008 Honorary Doctorate of Science, Montana State University

2007 Lemelson-MIT Award for Invention and Innovation

2005 Christopher Columbus Foundation Homeland Security Award

2005 Carl S. Marvel Creative Polymer Chemistry Award, American Chemical Society

References

Timothy M. Swager Wikipedia


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