Rice University’s big nano convo

Rice University’s 25th anniversary celebration of the discovery of buckminster fullerenes (noted previously in my May 13 2010 posting) is a conference while will be hosting a contingent of carbon nanotube specialists and a panel discussion featuring the team that discovered the buckminsterfullerene (buckyball). From the news item on physorg.com,

The Richard E. Smalley Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology, the world’s first nanotechnology center when it opened in 1991, will bring top scientists to Rice for the Buckyball Discovery Conference, a three-day event that begins Oct. 11 and will take a comprehensive look at the past, present and future of nanotechnology.

An interactive discussion about the discovery of the buckyball moderated by Tom Tritton, president of the Chemical Heritage Foundation, will kick off the event. Nobel laureates Robert Curl, Rice’s University Professor Emeritus and Kenneth S. Pitzer-Schlumberger Professor Emeritus of Natural Sciences; Sir Harold Kroto, a professor at the University of Sussex at the time of the find and now at Florida State University; and former Rice graduate students James Heath and Sean O’Brien will reminisce about their groundbreaking discovery and the many years they spent defending it, what their work has meant for science and where they see nanotechnology headed. They will talk about working with their Rice colleague and fellow laureate, the late Rick Smalley, and answer audience questions.

Eight of the world’s renowned carbon nanotechnologists will discuss current research and development as well as the future of nanotechnology. They include Phaedon Avouris, Marvin Cohen, Hongjie Dai, Millie Dresselhaus, Morinobu Endo, Andre Geim, Andreas Hirsch and Donald Huffman. Breakout sessions will delve into applications of nanotechnology and the obstacles it faces in areas that include environmental health and safety, energy, health, aerospace and materials.

The conference doesn’t take place until Oct. 10-13, 2010. Registration is free (but you are responsible for your travel, accommodation, and food).

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  1. Pingback: Nanoscience public relations at Rice University « FrogHeart

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