User:Jarakatutu/sandbox

Tab:

https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/EPFL_editathons/February_11th_editathon

https://orcid.org/orcid-search/search?searchQuery=Anne-Cl%C3%A9mence%20Corminb%C5%93uf

https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/authors/view/4616

https://www.sandozfondation.ch/en

https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2018/sc/c8sc01949e#!divAbstract

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/acscentsci.8b00551

https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Clemence_Corminboeuf

https://www.epfl.ch/labs/lcmd/corminboeuf/

Source à ajouter:

http://www.avisdexperts.ch/videos/view/10176

https://100femmes.ch/portraits/clemence-corminboeuf/ Anne-Clémence Corminbœuf (born cc. 1977) is a chemist and full professor of Theoretical chemistry and Computational chemistry. She is holding the Laboratory for Computational Molecular Design (LCMD ) chair at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL). Corminbœuf focus on the development of electronic structure methods. She introduce conceptual tools exploiting non-covalent interactions, opening promising perspectives in the domains of catalysis and organic electronic materials

Early life and education
Corminboeuf received her B.S. and M.S. degrees in chemistry from the University of Geneva. She completed her master thesis in computational chemistry at the Steacie Institute for Molecular Sciences (Canadian NRC, Ottawa). Then she obtained her PHD in computation/theoretical chemistry conducting research at both University of Geneva and TU-Dresden.

Clémence received her B.S. and M.S. degrees in chemistry from the University of Geneva. She completed her master thesis in computational chemistry at the Steacie Institute for Molecular Sciences (Canadian NRC, Ottawa) and obtained her PhD in computational/theoretical chemistry conducting research at both University of Geneva and TU-Dresden. In 2005, she became a SNSF post-doctoral fellow at New York University and then joined the group of Prof. Paul von Ragué Schleyer at the University of Georgia (Athens, USA) in 2006. She was appointed tenure track assistant professor at the EPFL in 2007 and promoted to associate professor in 2014. She holds two ERC grants (starting and consolidator). Clemence is now also on MARVEL’s Executive Committee.

grew up in France and completed her M.Sc. in Integrated Electronic Devices at the Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA) in Lyon, France in 1998. After completing her Masters, Lacour remained at INSA and conducted her graduate studies in Electrical Engineering from 1998 to 2001. In 2001, Lacour moved to the United States to work under the mentorship of Dr. Sigurd Wagner as Postdoctoral researcher at Princeton University. During her time at Princeton, Lacour made significant advancements in developing stretchable electronics that could be implemented in biological systems more easily than typical electronic hardware. Lacour finished her postdoctoral work in 2005 and began further postdoctoral work at the University of Cambridge under the mentorship of Dr. James Fawcett where she began to explore the therapeutic potential of her technologies in repairing nerves after injury. In 2007, Lacour received the University Research Fellowship from the Royal Society and became a Research Project Manager and head of the Stretchable Bioelectronics group at the Nanoscience Centre in Cambridge, UK.

Awards and honors

 * Sandoz Family Foundation
 * Exemple:
 * 2006 MIT Technology Review Young Innovator Award TR35
 * 2006 MIT Technology Review Young Innovator Award TR35

Select media

 * Exemple:
 * 2011 The Economist “A Shapely future for circuits - Report on Stretchable Electronics”

Select publications

 * Exemple:
 * Lacour, S.: Stretchable gold conductors on elastomeric substrates; S. Périchon Lacour, S. Wagner, Z. Huang, Z. Suo Applied Physics Letters, 2003, vol. 82, no.15, p. 2404 – 2406.
 * Lacour, S.: Stretchable gold conductors on elastomeric substrates; S. Périchon Lacour, S. Wagner, Z. Huang, Z. Suo Applied Physics Letters, 2003, vol. 82, no.15, p. 2404 – 2406.