231st ECS Meeting with Battery Student Slam!
Don’t forget to make your plans for the upcoming 231st ECS Meeting in New Orleans, May 28 – June 2, 2017, the abstract deadline of Dec. 16 is fast approaching!
Also be sure to check out our brand new symposium, A06 – Battery Student Slam 1, aimed at students working in battery technology, featuring crisp presentations, and prizes for the best talks. Learn more about this unique symposium by reading the Call for Papers or the ECS Blog
Of course, we will also be holding our General Society Student Poster Session, where we award first and second prizes for the best student posters in electrochemistry and also in solid state science. In order to be eligible for the General Student Poster prizes, you MUST submit your abstract to symposium Z01.
Don’t miss your opportunity to submit your abstract and participate in one of the most prestigious events in electrochemical and solid state science.
Jon Fold von Bülow
Jon Fold von Bülow recieved his Cand. Scient. in Nanoscience from University of Copenhagen in 2011 and is currently working with upscaling Li- and Na-ion battery materials to the 100+ kg scale for Haldor Topsøe A/S.
Jon's main interest lies in energy technologies for the future and he started working with fusion energy at Risø National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy. He has since developed a growing interest in technologies that are closer to potential industrial application. He is a highly dedicated academic as well as a very active professional and have initiated and participated in many different projects.
His studies within nanotechnological material science and affiliation with Risø National Laboratories has taken him to Germany, China and the US, where he has collaborated independently with several international research groups. He has so far succeeded in pushing two academic projects to industrial application, first with the Danish company Coloplast A/S and recently with a California-based battery start-up – an invention that is currently being US patented.
Jon has conducted most of his work on Li-batteries in the facilities of California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI) as a research scholar at UCSB-MIT-Caltech Institute for Collaborative Biotechnologies (ICB). The manganese based cathode materials he fabricated during this period were all tuned for high-power applications and covers synthesis of various manganese oxides from solution, molten and solid states.
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