Nanfang Yu Wins Young Investigator Award from the U.S. Office of Naval Research

Yu won the award for creative research with far-reaching implications for technological needs of the Department of Defense.

May 06 2016 | By Jesse Adams

Nanfang Yu, assistant professor of applied physics, has won a 2016 Young Investigator Award from the U.S. Office of Naval Research for exceptionally creative research with far-reaching implications for technological needs of the Navy and the Department of Defense.

Nanfang Yu
—Photo by Jeffrey Schifman

Yu is one of just 47 early-career tenure-track academic scientists selected this year for the prestigious honor, one of the oldest and most selective research advancement programs in the country. For his proposal, “Phase-Change Correlated Perovskites as a New Platform for Photonics,” he is slated to receive approximately $510,000 over a three year period for equipment, graduate student stipends and scholarships, and other expenses to sustain his research.

Earlier this year, Yu received a major grant from the U.S. Air Force’s Office of Scientific Research as part of the Defense University Research Instrumentation Program (DURIP), which helps researchers procure state-of-the-art equipment for developing next-generation defense capabilities and will support his work with infrared cameras and other light sources.

Yu’s research interests include mid-infrared and far-infrared optics and optoelectronic devices and active plasmonics and metamaterials with gain media. He studies the interaction between light and structured active materials at the nanometer scale and builds novel devices including lasers, detectors, and active components for controlling light. His recent work includes investigations into what humans can learn from unique Saharan silver ants capable of surviving extreme heat and research into unusual optical waves that resist distortion.

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