Country for PR: Japan
Contributor: Kyodo News JBN
Friday, August 28 2020 - 16:00
AsiaNet
"I Love Being Pioneer"--Interview with Prominent WPI-MANA Researcher
TSUKUBA, Japan, Aug. 28, 2020 /Kyodo JBN, AsiaNet /--

The International Center for Materials Nanoarchitectonics (WPI-MANA), a unit of 
the National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS), welcomed Honorary 
Professor Hideo Hosono of Tokyo Institute of Technology as a NIMS Distinguished 
Fellow and the leader of the Electro-Active Materials Team.

(Photo: 
https://kyodonewsprwire.jp/prwfile/release/M105739/202008183234/_prw_PI1fl_es00fXV1.jpg)


Prof. Hosono, the world-renowned researcher, is famous for creating amorphous 
oxide semiconductor IGZO-TFTs and room temperature-stable electrides, and 
discovering iron-based superconductors. He discusses his life and work in an 
interview.

Q: You have done important work in a variety of fields. What's your secret?
"I don't have any secrets. I've just been focusing on what I want to do without 
restrictions on the technical or academic field. For example, chemistry and 
physics as two separate disciplines have little meaning in materials science. 
My main interest is in functional materials utilizing electrons in solids. In 
the case of semiconductors, I study the movement of electrons under an electric 
field, and superconductors are similar--you manipulate electrons in catalysis 
to react with molecules on a surface.

"My PhD thesis was on line shape analysis of electron spin resonance spectra in 
glass--rather fundamental work. After that, I did joint work in the material 
sciences department at Nagoya Institute of Technology, where I worked with 
ceramics, especially photoactive glasses and protonic conduction in glass. I 
did ion implantation into SiO2 glass for a year at Vanderbilt University in the 
U.S. as well as research at Oak Ridge National Lab, in Tennessee.

"I returned to Japan, to Tokyo Tech, and changed my research topic from 
photoactive glasses to oxide semiconductors. The most visible result of my work 
at that time was the proposal of transparent amorphous oxide semiconductors for 
thin film transistors, leading to the IGZO TFT, which is now used in 
high-resolution LCD panels such as tablets and OLEDs for TV screens. When I 
started this research in 1993, there was almost no work being done in the 
field. But now, 25 years later, oxide semiconductors are the world standard for 
TFTs for flat-panel displays and beyond. It was during this work on oxide 
semiconductors that we discovered iron-based superconductors."


SOURCE: 
International Center for Materials Nanoarchitectonics (WPI-MANA), National 
Institute for Materials Science (NIMS)