Fullerene Platfrom Technology:
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Sixty Scientific Advisory Board
Dr. Richard Smalley, Nobel Laureate (Rice University). Hackerman Professor of Chemistry and Physics. Director of Rice University Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology. Best known for his discovery of C60 and other fullerenes in 1985, for which he won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1996. Pioneer in nanotechnology, giant fullerenes, and buckytubes.
Dr. Fred Wudl, (U. C. Santa Barbara). Professor of Chemistry and Physics. Associate Director of the UCSB Institute for Polymers and Organic Solids. Pioneer in fullerene chemistry and biology, electrically conducting polymers, and organic conductors and ferromagnets. A co-discoverer of anti-HIV fullerene compounds.
Dr. Raymond Schinazi, (Emory Medical School). Professor of Virology. Director of Laboratory of Biochemical Pharmacology, Emory Medical School. Pioneer in fullerenes' virucidal effect on HIV-1 and expert in anti-cancer and anti-viral drug development. A co-discoverer of anti-HIV fullerene compounds.
Dr. Bernard Erlanger (Columbia University). Professor of Microbiology and noted immunologist. Pioneer in steroid antibodies. In the 1950's, Dr. Erlanger developed the now widely-used techniques of linking haptens to BSA in order to produce antibodies.
Dr. Norman Jensen (Jacobus Pharmaceuticals). Senior executive in two of the worlds largest pharmaceutical companies. Former Asst VP Wyeth-Ayerst Pharmaceutical Co and Director of medicinal chemistry, Merck.
Dr. Robert Haddon (University of Kentucky). Noted fullerene scientist, dicoverer of fullerene superconductors, Director of Center for Advanced Energy at UK.
Dr. Karl Kadish (University of Houston). Professor of chemistry and founding chair of the ECS Fullerene Division, current the worlds largest scientific organization dedicated to fullerene resear |