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Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere
causas. Virgil Georgica 2,490
A Brief Bio. Professor Carroll earned
his BS (1985) in physics from NC State University (Raleigh) and his PhD
(1993) in physics from Wesleyan University in (Middletown, CT) under
the supervision of Dr. Dale Doering. His thesis work involved
charged
defects in complex oxide materials. As a postdoctoral associate for Professor Dawn Bonnell
at the University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia), Dr. Carroll worked on
the application of scanning probes to size and dimension related
phenomena in oxide supported metal nanoclusters. From there Dr.
Carroll became a research associate at the
Max-Planck-Insitut für Metallforschung in Stuttgart Germany under
the direction of Professor Manfred Rühle.
His primary research focus was nanoscale phenomena at metal-ceramic
interfaces using a combination of microscopy techniques. It was
at the
MPI that Dr. Carroll first began working on carbon nanotube systems and
specifically was the
first to identify the
signature for one dimensional behavior in
such systems as well as defect states for those
systems. In 1997 Professor Carroll began the Laboratory for
Nanotechnology at Clemson University (SC) where he recieved early
promotion and tenure in the department of physics. At Clemson he
established a program in organic devices based upon carbon nanotube
nanocomposites demonstrating enhanced lifetime and performance in OLEDs
for the first time. In 2003, Professor Carroll's group moved to
Wake
Forest University in Winston-Salem NC to establish the Center for
Nanotechnology and Molecular Materials. This move allowed the
research
team to expand its work into the fields of biomedical nanotechnologies
and to continue their work in nanocomposite organic devices such as
photovoltaics. Professor Carroll's team continues to push the
state-of-the-art in performance of organic solar cells, having set
performance records twice in recent years. Today professor
Carroll's primary research interests are: Growth
and assembly of novel nanostructures , Optics
of nanostructures and Nano-photonics, Quantum-functional properties
of nanophase blends, Organic nanocomposite devices and
technologies including organic photovoltaics, lighting systems, and IR
sensors, Biomedical-nanotechnology
including smart therapeutics, advanced/responsive tissue scaffolding
technology, and biological-technology signal transduction.
Since
becoming faculty, Professor Carroll has published over 150
articles in scholarly journals
such as PRL, APL, Advanced Materials, and NanoLetters. He has
published 1 text book on one dimensional metals, edited two books,
written three book chapters, and holds 12 patents or patent
filings.
Dr. Carroll is a frequent speaker at international conferences with
more than 65 invited talks in the past few years. He is also a
reviewer for 23 different journals, a regular panelist at NSF, SFI,
DFG, AFOSR, ARO, and NASA, and is a frequent consultant to a number of
industrial interests. He has been actively involved in two
spin-off
companies utilizing technologies from his labs. Professor Carroll
continues to maintain strong ties to the Max-Planck-Insitut für
Festkörperforschung in Stuttgart Germany, the Department of
Physics at Trinity College in
Dublin Ireland, and the Department of Materials Science at Rice
University.
Professor Carroll
lives
in Winston-Salem with his family where he is active in the Moravian
Church, volunteers at the local YMCA, and plays in a competition
bagpipe
band.
To read more about
Professor Carroll's work: The
Carroll Research Group web pages
The
Philosophical Basis of Education
An education is not
just the search for knowledge, it is
also the search for wisdom.
Courses Taught by Professor Carroll
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