Leibniz Prize for LMU researcher Dmitri Efetov
7 Dec 2023
LMU physicist Dmitri Efetov obtains premier research award in Germany for his work on graphene.
7 Dec 2023
LMU physicist Dmitri Efetov obtains premier research award in Germany for his work on graphene.
Graphene is an allotrope of carbon with very special qualities. In the nanomaterial, which consists of just a single layer of atoms, electrons become massless. If you twist two layers of graphene to a certain ‘magic’ angle in relation to each other, you get a variety of exotic quantum phases with new physical phenomena such as superconducting, magnetic, and isolating states, the properties of which Dmitri Efetov studies. His research has yielded fundamental new insights into various quantum effects.
For his pioneering work on the manufacture of highly homogeneous ‘magic-angle’ graphene, Dmitri Efetov has been awarded a 2024 Leibniz Prize by the German Research Foundation (DFG).
Dmitri Efetov has occupied the Chair of Experimental Solid State Physics at LMU since August 2021. Having studied physics at ETH Zurich, Efetov began researching graphene while doing his doctorate at Columbia University, New York. Subsequently, he worked as a researcher at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the Institute of Photonic Sciences (ICFO) in Barcelona. While there, he and his group were the third research team anywhere in the world to demonstrate superconductivity in magic-angle graphene. In 2021, he took up an appointment as Chair of Experimental Solid State Physics at LMU Munich. He is also a member of the Cluster of Excellence Munich Center for Quantum Science and Technology (MCQST).
Awarded by the German Research Foundation, the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize is considered the most important research award in Germany. This year, the prize will be given out to ten scientists. The winning scientists can use the prize money of 2.5 million euros for their research work for a period of up to seven years.
LMU researcher Dmitri Efetov:
Exotic physics in the second dimension
Portrait from the research magazine EINSICHTEN:
Precise disorder