Professor Sir Richard Friend

E903700

Professor Sir Richard Friend is a distinguished British physicist renowned for his pioneering work in plastic electronics and leadership in the scientific and engineering community.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Professor Sir Richard Friend canonical 1

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Fellow of the Royal Society
Knight Bachelor
academic
physicist
scientist
awardReceived Europhysics Prize NERFINISHED
Faraday Medal NERFINISHED
Institute of Physics awards NERFINISHED
Knight Bachelor
Millennium Technology Prize NERFINISHED
Royal Medal of the Royal Society NERFINISHED
coFounderOf Cambridge Display Technology NERFINISHED
Plastic Logic NERFINISHED
countryOfCitizenship United Kingdom
doctoralStudent Donal Bradley NERFINISHED
Henning Sirringhaus NERFINISHED
educatedAt Cambridge University
surface form: University of Cambridge
employer Cambridge University
surface form: University of Cambridge
familyName Friend
fieldOfWork condensed matter physics
optoelectronics
organic semiconductors
physics
plastic electronics
givenName Richard
hasAcademicAdvisor Nevill Mott NERFINISHED
knownFor contributions to organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs)
development of polymer light-emitting diodes
leadership in the scientific and engineering community
pioneering work on plastic electronics
research on semiconducting polymers
languageOfWorkOrName English
memberOf Academia Europaea NERFINISHED
Royal Academy of Engineering NERFINISHED
Royal Society
name Professor Sir Richard Friend NERFINISHED
nationality British
occupation research scientist
university professor
positionHeld Cavendish Professor of Physics at the University of Cambridge NERFINISHED
Director of the Winton Programme for the Physics of Sustainability
Head of the Cavendish Laboratory
researchInterest charge transport in disordered materials
light-emitting polymers
organic photovoltaic devices
sexOrGender male
workplace Cavendish Laboratory NERFINISHED

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.