A series of Distinguished Lectures sponsored by NCCR MARVEL, bringing high-profile researchers in contact with the MARVEL community. These lectures take place either at EPFL or in one of the other participating institutions.
Description: The 40th NCCR MARVEL Distinguished Lecture will be given by Prof. Alexandre Tkatchenko, University of Luxembourg. He will be presenting a lecture entitled: 'Realizing Schrödinger's dream with AI-enabled molecular simulations'
Description: The 39th NCCR MARVEL Distinguished Lecture will be given by Prof. Gerbrand Ceder (University of California, Berkeley). He will be presenting a lecture entitled: 'How the future of science may look: AI and autonomous laboratories for materials synthesis'.
Description: The 38th NCCR MARVEL Distinguished Lecture will be given by Prof. David Srolovitz, The University of Hong Kong. He will be presenting a lecture entitled: 'Grain boundaries are natural Brownian ratchets: directional GB anisotropy'.
Description: The 37th NCCR MARVEL Distinguished Lecture will be given by Prof. Massimiliano Di Ventra, University of California, San Diego. He will be presenting a lecture entitled: 'MemComputing: when memory becomes a computing tool'
Description: The 36th NCCR MARVEL Distinguished Lecture will be given by Prof. Dominika Zgid, University of Michigan. She will be presenting a lecture entitled: 'Ab-initio Green's functions methods for molecules and solids. What accuracy can we reach?'
Description: The 35th NCCR MARVEL Distinguished Lecture will be given by Prof. Emmanouil Kioupakis, University of Michigan. He will be presenting a lecture entitled: 'Advancing the state of the art in semiconductor technology through predictive atomistic calculations: from uncovering fundamental limitations to discovering new materials.'
Description: The 34th NCCR MARVEL Distinguished Lecture will be given by Prof. Claudia Felser, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids (Dresden, Germany). She will be presenting a lecture entitled: 'Chirality and Topology'.
Description: The 33rd NCCR MARVEL Distinguished Lecture will be given by Prof. Kristian Sommer Thygesen, professor computational atomic-scale materials design at the Technical University of Denmark (DTU). He will be presenting a lecture entitled: 'Emergent Properties in Flatland: When One Plus One is More than Two'
Description: The 32nd NCCR MARVEL Distinguished Lecture will be given by Prof. Heather Kulik, professor of chemical engineering at the MIT. She will be discussing materials discovery in challenging spaces with machine learning, from transition metal complexes to metal-organic frameworks.
Description: This talk addresss issues when dealing with strongly correlated systems. This lecture was not recorded for more details view the profile link.
Description: Alex Zunger discusses whether Materials discovery by declarative property searching is feasible. This lecture was not recorded for more details view the profile link.