1. Point defects in ZnOMatthew D. McCluskey2. Point defects in group III nitridesBo Anders Monemar and Plamen P. Paskov3. Defects in 1D-NanowiresJan Stehr4. Defects in carbon nanotubesAli Ghavamian, Maksym Rybachuk and Andreas Öchsner5. Defects in grapheneLitao Sun and Tao Xu6. Defects in 2D-materialsWu Zhou and Junhao Lin7. Energy upconversion promoted by defectsIrina Buyanova8. Defects for quantum information processing in SiCGeorgy Astakhov and Vladimir Dyakonov9. Defects for quantum information processing in SiEisuke Abe and Kohei Itoh10. Room temperature defect engineered spintronics in dilute nitridesWeimin M. Chen
Dr. Stehr is the Lab Manager at the Swedish Interdisciplinary Magnetic Resonance Center. In 2015 he received the Corbett Prize for outstanding young researchers and the International Association of Advanced Materials young scientist award. He has given a number of invited talks at international conferences and has been awarded multiple grants for his research.
Dr. Buyanova is currently the Co-Chair of the Scientific Division of Functional Electronic Materials Linköping University. Her current research interests include the physics and applications of new functional materials and nanostructures with a particular emphasis on: dilute nitrides, electronic structure of innovative quantum structures, and functional materials based on ZnO semiconductors and related nanostructures. She has acted as a program committee member and organizer for international conferences, including most recently the 33rd International Conference of Physics, Semiconductors in Beijing China. She has edited two books, authored more than 480 peer-reviewed publications and has given 60 invited talks at international conferences.
Weimin Chen currently acts as the Director of the Swedish Interdisciplinary Magnetic Resonance Center and the Head of the Scientific Division of Functional Electronic Materials at Linköping University. The focus of the group includes novel spintronic materials, advanced electronic and photonic materials based on wide bandgap semiconductors, and semiconductor nanostructures. Professor Chen has also had leadership roles in more than 30 national and international research projects as well as serving from 1999-2007 as the Vice President of the Nordic Electron Paramagnetic Society. He has edited two books, authored more than 600 peer-reviewed articles and has acted as a reviewer for 11 European and American funding organizations.