Academic Profile : Faculty
Assoc Prof Wang Xiao
Associate Professor, School of Physical & Mathematical Sciences - Division of Physics & Applied Physics
Associate Professor, School of Electrical & Electronic Engineering
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Dr. Xiao (Renshaw) Wang is a tenured Associate Professor under School of Physical and Mathematical Science (SPMS) and School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering (EEE) at Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore. He obtained his Bachelor in physics from Shandong University (SDU, China) and his PhD in physics at the National University of Singapore (NUS, Singapore) in 2012. Subsequently, he was awarded a Rubicon research grant by the Dutch government and conducted two-year research at the University of Twente (UTwente, Netherlands) as a Rubicon fellow. In 2014, he moved to Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT, USA) as a postdoctoral associate. From 2015 to 2016, he is also a postdoctoral researcher at Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART, Singapore). He joined NTU as Nanyang Assistant Professor in 2016 and was promoted to associate professor in 2023.
My group website is http://www.renshawlab.com/
My group website is http://www.renshawlab.com/
1. Material fabrication of strongly correlated electronic system and 2D materials;
2. Electronic property characterization on materials and electronics devices;
3. Magnetism. Searching new magnetic materials and explore novel spintronics device.
Find more from our group website http://www.renshawlab.com/
2. Electronic property characterization on materials and electronics devices;
3. Magnetism. Searching new magnetic materials and explore novel spintronics device.
Find more from our group website http://www.renshawlab.com/
- Spin Orbit Coupling based IntelligencE TechnologY (SOCIETY)
- Pressing and enhancing emergent nickelate superconductors
- Quantum Geometric Advantage
- Quantum Geometric Advantage - Hybrid quantum platform
- College of Science Research Award 2024
- High-performance CMOS based on high-k oxide dielectrics and low-dimensional materials