Professors

Material Science

Material Science

TIAN Mingliang
Professor of
Quantum Phenomena in Confined Geometries

Visit the website of Dr. TIAN Mingliang's labortory 

 

Biography & Introduction 

TIAN Mingliang obtained his PH.D degree from Wuhan University in 1992. He became a faculty member in 1994 as an associate professor of University of Science and Technology of China and was promoted to a full professor in 1998. In 1996 and 1999, Dr TIAN pursued his research career in Teikyo University in Japan and LEPES/CNRS, Gronoble in France as a visiting scientist. During 2001-2010, Dr. TIAN worked in Pennsylvania State University as a research associate and then assistant professor of physics. Since 2010, he was employed as a researcher by High Magnetic Field Laboratory of Chinese Academy of Sciences (CHMFL). His research interests involve charge-density waves, carbon nanotubes, high-Tc superconductivity and physical properties in confined geometries. He has contributed 105 research papers published in well-recognized journals, including 33 papers in Nature Physics,Phys. Rev. Lett., NanoLett., JACS, Phys. Rev. B and Appl. Phys. Lett. He also serves as manuscript reviewer for 36 international journals in physics and materials science.

 

Research 

 

Research Interests 

Charge and spin transport in high magnetic fields.
Proximity effect in superconductor/ferromagnet and the related hybrid structures.
Quantum transport and the related new phenomena in topological insulator nanowires.
Superconductivity and magnetism in confined geometries.

 

Selected Publications

  1. Tian et al., Superconductivity and quantum oscillations in crystalline Bi nanowires.  Nano Letters 9, 3196-3202 (2009). 
  2. Tian et al., Evidence of local superconductivity in granular Bi nanowires fabricated by electrodeposition.Phys. Rev B 78, 045417 (2008)
  3. Tian et al., Observation of superconductivity in granular Bi nanowires fabricated by electrodeposition. Nano Letters 6, 2773-2780 (2006)
  4. Tian et al., Suppression of superconductivity in nanowires by bulk superconductors. Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 076802 (2005)
  5. Tian et al., Penetrating the oxide barrier in situ and separating freestanding porous alumina films in one step. Nano Letters  5, 697-703 (2005)

 

 
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