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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Phillip Geissler
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SUMMARY:Phillip Geissler
DESCRIPTION:<p>	Professor Phillip Geissler, University of California, Berkeley. "<span><span><font face="Calibri">Nanocrystals in flux: The importance of geometry during structural and compositional change." </font></span></span>Woodward CCB Departmental Colloquium.</p><!--break--><p>	<font face="Calibri"><font size="3">The repertoire of experimentally accessible nanostructures is greatly expanded by abilities to modify their shape and composition post-synthesis. Procedures for doing so, however, are typically far from equilibrium, and therefore difficult to control. Here I will discuss theoretical and computational work to understand the microscopic dynamics of two such processes: (i) chemical etching, which triggers a driving-force dependent sequence of shape changes, and (ii) cation exchange, which swaps out chemical constituents in situ. In both cases geometry plays a surprisingly dominant role in determining the nonequilibrium fate of model systems, even at the atomic scale.</font></font></p>
LOCATION:Pfizer Lecture Hall
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20190506T201500Z
DTEND:20190506T211500Z
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