From Deseret News archives:

Ute chemist, colleague win physics prize

Published: Monday, Oct. 16, 2006 1:10 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
The first two prerequisites one would expect in order to win an important award from the American Physical Society are to be a physicist and to be a member of the society.

Joel S. Miller is neither. His title is distinguished professor of chemistry at the University of Utah. Yet he and a fellow researcher who is a physicist and a member of the society are recipients of the 2007 James C. McGroddy Prize for New Materials, to be presented by the American Physical Society when the group meets in Denver, March 5-9, 2007.

The $5,000 prize is to be shared by Miller and his long-time research collaborator, Arthur J. Epstein of Ohio State University. Epstein is a distinguished university professor in the departments of physics and chemistry.

The society's Web site (www.aps.org) notes that the McGroddy Prize is awarded to "recognize and encourage outstanding achievement in the science and application of new materials."

Story continues below
In this case, the new materials are revolutionary: non-metallic material that are as magnetic as metals. The citation notes Miller and Epstein are honored for "discovery and characterization of organic-based magnets, and for observation and study of predictable and previously unknown magnetic phenomena in these fascinating materials leading to fundamentally new science and the demonstrated potential for creative new technologies."

Before their discoveries, magnetic materials were metals or metal-based materials like iron or magnetite. "It was our idea to think differently and use organic chemistry and the methods of organic chemistry," Miller said in a Deseret Morning News telephone interview.

They tried to find organic material that could be used to make magnets.

"The initial thought was this was a formidable if not impossible challenge, because there was no basis for this," Miller said. Or maybe, he added, thinking in magnetic terms, there was a "negative basis" — an indication that it really could not be done.

But they persevered and discovered ways to manipulate non-metals so their "unpaired electrons" would become magnetic. Some of these can be prepared with solvents, so they are not magnetic when dissolved but become magnetic when the solvent evaporates.

They can be deposited as film that is organic and magnetic. "We can make cast films with it," he said. "We can fabricate it in different ways, because of that."

Eventual applications might include new types of data memory storage on disks. An unusual property that could apply, the researchers found, is that the material's magnetism can be controlled through changes in the color of light shone on it.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Kim Raff, Deseret Morning News

Chemistry professor Joel S. Miller looks through a model of the structure of an organic magnet.

previousnext

Latest comments

Editorial: 10 years of TRAX

Sorry earlier I meant to say that tracks seems to travel at 35 miles an hour...

'Peter Frumhoff, the director of science and policy at the Union of...

The Non-BCS crowd ought to create their own title game...their own brand, and...

Letters: Democrats' ethics

That's the whole of your defense of GOP resistance to badly-needed ethics...

Your criticism should hardly be focused on Bennett alone. What about all the...

'Wired's Threat Level blog reported on November 20 that Gavin Schmidt, a...

The reality of climate change is supported by multiple lines of evidence and...

BYU professor remembered

I had the priviledge of staying in the LeBaron home on severl occasions as I...

Letters: Growing jobless rate

So the unemployment rate has dropped to "just" 10%, huh? I wonder what that...

Ahh for the love of money...what money can buy!!!

Advertisements