報 告 人:趙江波
報告題目:On a journey of light interacting with miscellaneous matters
報告時間:2025年8月11日(周一)上午9:30
報告地點:物理與電子工程學院428會議室
主辦單位:物理與電子工程學院、科學技術研究院
報告人簡介:
Dr Jiangbo Zhao is currently a lecturer at the School of Engineering,commencing his post in April 2021. He received his PhD degree from Macquarie University, Australia (in 2015), and then undertook post-doctoral trainings at the University of Adelaide, Australia(2015-17,20-21), and at the Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology (IPHT), Jena, Germany (2018-2019, Alexander von Humboldt Fellowship). His work has led to 36 peer-reviewed journal articles (h-index 21, with citations > 4750), with representative achievements including breaking the bottleneck issue of “concentration quenching”, inventing a new, universal methodology for creating noble metal nanoparticles in glass for unique colours, identifying the shortcoming of the Einstein-Smoluchowski equation in accounting for light scattering, and developing the new perturbation theory and new methodology for revamping the mixing rule, e.g., the stronger successor to the Lorenz-Lorentz equation. He has filed 3 international patents, underpinning a startup EZY-GLAS Technology he co-found during his short stint in Adelaide (2020-21).
He is the recipient of several prestigious awards for ECRs, such as 65th Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting, 7th HOPE Meeting with Nobel Laureates (JSPS HOPE Fellow), National Awards for Outstanding Chinese Students Studying Overseas, and Royal Society of NSW Scholarship. Since 2012, he has given 20 invited talks and lectures at major international conferences or institutes. He serves as a regular referee of international journals (>50), including Chemical Society Reviews, Nature Communications, Advanced Science, Advanced Optical Materials, Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, etc.
報告摘要:
Colours we encounter in daily life harbour basic, complex physics. Understanding and juggling with colours against a media at different length scales (i.e., light-matter interaction) are fascinating in nature and can be consequential, within or beyond the expectations. This talk will briefly touch on certain facets of it my research has been devoted to, with subjects spanning from biomarkers, through coloured glass and smart window, nanoparticles tracking, to water (strictly speaking, bluish instead of transparent) and liquid mixtures.