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Noel Anthony Clark (born 17 December 1940 in Cleveland, Ohio)[1] is an American physicist, university professor at the University of Colorado Boulder, and pioneer in the development of electro-optical applications of liquid crystals.

Clark graduated from John Carroll University with a bachelor's degree in 1963 and a master's degree in 1965. He received his doctorate from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1970 under George Benedek. Clark was a postdoc at Harvard University. At the University of Colorado he became in 1973 an assistant professor and in 1981 a full professor. There he heads the Liquid Crystal Materials Research Center (later Soft Materials Research Center). In 1984, he was one of the founders of Displaytech, Inc., manufacturing color TFN modules, monochrome graphic displays, and segmented TN LCDs.

Clark has worked in many areas in soft condensed matter and complex fluid physics, including liquid crystals, colloidal liquids and crystals, liquid structure and melting, and biophysics. His liquid crystal research has focused on the use of ultrathin freely-suspended films to study the effects of interfacial confinement and low dimensionality on phase behavior, and on liquid crystal electro-optics, in particular the physics and applications of ferroelectric liquid crystals. His current interests are in liquid crystals of nucleic acids and in the exotic soft phases formed by banana-shaped molecules, especially their interplay of polarity and chirality, and the appearance of macroscopic chiral phases in fluids of achiral molecules.[2]

Professor Clark's group has pioneered a major new liquid crystal electro-optic technology, employing ferroelectric liquid crystals to make high-speed bistable light valves. These devices, which can be configured into linear and matrix arrays, are of particular use in optical computing and are one of the principal technologies to be developed in the Center for Optoelectronic Computing Systems at the University of Colorado. Recently the group has begun a new project on fabrication of structures on a nanometer length scale. This work, which grew out of their research on biomembrane liquid crystals, is directed toward using two-dimensional protein crystals as fabrication masks and templates.[3]

In 2006 he received, jointly with Robert B. Meyer, the Oliver E. Buckley Condensed Matter Prize for basic theoretical and experimental studies on liquid crystals, in particular their ferroelectric and chiral properties (laudatio).[2] He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Since 2007 he is a member of the National Academy of Sciences. He was a Guggenheim Fellow in 1985/86 and received a Humboldt Research Award.

Selected publications

  • with D. Chen et al.: Chiral heliconal ground state of nanoscale pitch in a nematic liquid crystal of achiral molecular dimers, Proc. Nat. Acad., vol. 110, 2013, pp. 15931–15935
  • with L. E. Hough et al.: Helical nanofilament phases, Science, vol. 325, 2009, pp. 456–460
  • with L. E. Hough et al.: Chiral isotropic liquids from achiral molecules, Science, vol. 325, 2009, 452–456
  • with G. J. Fang et al.: Athermal photofluidization of glasses, Nature Communications, vol. 4, 2013, p. 1521
  • with D. K. Yoon et al.: Chirality-preserving growth of helical filaments in the B4 phase of bent-core liquid crystals, J. Am. Chem. Soc., vol. 133, 2011, pp. 12656–12663

References

  1. ^ biographical information from American Men and Women of Science, Thomson Gale 2004
  2. ^ a b Buckley Prize 2006]
  3. ^ "Noel Clark". Physics, University of Colorado Boulder.