Photo of: Gerald Meyer

Dr. Gerald J. Meyer

View Title...

Gerald's profile was created using:
Sort By:

1-10 of 18 online sources for Gerald Meyer

  • View Online Source
    www.technologyreview.com/printer_friendly_article.aspx? - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/13/2008    Last Visited: 3/19/2008  

    Ruthenium-based dyes get efficiencies of about 11 percent, says Gerald Meyer, a chemistry professor at Johns Hopkins University.But, he says, "to my knowledge, these are the highest efficiencies with organic [dyes]."

  • View Online Source
    www.lipidmedicine.com/index.php?q=Category:Johns_Hopkin - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/7/2008    Last Visited: 7/7/2008  

    Gerald Meyer

  • View Online Source
    www.technologyreview.com/Nanotech/18259/ - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/5/2007    Last Visited: 3/6/2007  

    "This is very important work," says Gerald Meyer, professor of chemistry at Johns Hopkins University.

  • View Online Source
    www.nasonline.org/site/PageServer/application/PageServe - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2006    Last Visited: 7/27/2008  

    Gerald Meyer, Johns Hopkins University

  • View Online Source
    www.nseresearch.org/2003/A_NanoProgram031208.htm - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2003    Last Visited: 3/3/2008  

    Gerald Meyer, Johns Hopkins University

  • View Online Source
    2004 GRC on Electron Donor Acceptor Interactions - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/23/2004    Last Visited: 12/11/2004  

    Discussion Leader: Gerald Meyer (Johns Hopkins University)

  • View Online Source
    204 Meeting Symposia - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 10/14/2003    Last Visited: 7/9/2006  

    Probing Energetics of Molecule-Semiconductor Interfaces for Nanocrystalline TiO 2 Solar Cells - A.M. Stux, P.G. Hoertz, G. Oskam, P.C. Searson, and G.J. Meyer (Johns Hopkins University)

  • View Online Source
    Capitol Reports / Environmental News Link - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/16/2003    Last Visited: 10/24/2003  

    "It's safe to say that we don't fully understand why this approach works so well, but we'll take it and develop it and figure out the details as we go," said Gerald Meyer, professor of chemistry in the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences at The Johns Hopkins University.

    The new technique was developed by Sherine Obare, a postdoctoral fellow in Meyer's lab.His new approach combines an extremely thin film of titanium dioxide with a compound found in life known as hemin.
    ...
    Meyer is director of the National Science Foundation-funded Collaborative Research Activities in Environmental Molecular Sciences (CRAEMS) Center at Johns Hopkins, which is dedicated to finding ways to deal with the environmental effects of organohalides."These compounds play many important and beneficial roles in the chemical and pharmaceutical industries, so they're not going away soon, and it's important that we find ways to minimize their environmental effects," he said.

  • View Online Source
    Chemical & Engineering News: Editor's Page - Energy Is... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 10/17/2005    Last Visited: 1/9/2007  

    The principal authors of the papers that make up the forum are Thomas J. Meyer, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill ("Chemical Approaches to Artificial Photosynthesis"), Thomas E. Mallouk, Pennsylvania State University ("Light-to-Chemical Energy Conversion in Lamellar Solids and Thin Films"), Michael Grätzel, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne ("Solar Energy Conversion by Dye-Sensitized Photovoltaic Cells"), Gerald J. Meyer, Johns Hopkins University ("Molecular Approaches to Solar Energy Conversion with Coordination Compounds Anchored to Semiconductor Surfaces"), Eisenberg ("Platinum Chromophore-Based Systems for Photoinduced Charge Separation: A Molecular Design Approach for Artificial Photosynthesis"), Nocera ("Molecular Chemistry of Consequence to Renewable Energy"), Arthur J. Nozik, National Renewable Energy Laboratory ("Exciton Multiplication and Relaxation Dynamics in Quantum Dots: Applications to Ultrahigh-Efficiency Solar Photon Conversion"), and Nathan S. Le

  • View Online Source
    Chemical & Engineering News: Editor's Page - Energy Is... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 10/17/2005    Last Visited: 10/17/2005  

    The principal authors of the papers that make up the forum are Thomas J. Meyer, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (,Chemical Approaches to Artificial Photosynthesis,), Thomas E. Mallouk, Pennsylvania State University (,Light-to-Chemical Energy Conversion in Lamellar Solids and Thin Films,), Michael Grätzel, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne (,Solar Energy Conversion by Dye-Sensitized Photovoltaic Cells,), Gerald J. Meyer, Johns Hopkins University (,Molecular Approaches to Solar Energy Conversion with Coordination Compounds Anchored to Semiconductor Surfaces,), Eisenberg (,Platinum Chromophore-Based Systems for Photoinduced Charge Separation: A Molecular Design Approach for Artificial Photosynthesis,), Nocera (,Molecular Chemistry of Consequence to Renewable Energy,), Arthur J. Nozik, National Renewable Energy Laboratory (,Exciton Multiplication and Relaxation Dynamics in Quantum Dots: Applications to Ultrahigh-Efficiency Solar Photon Conversion,), and Nathan S. Le

Page:  1 2 Next

Wrong Person?

Try these instead
More...
For Recruiters For Sales Pros

Copyright © 2008 Zoom Information Inc. All rights reserved.

BPS_S5.0.5_newui_RC002_P001.1 OM16