Andrew Bruce Bocarsly (born April 23, 1954) is currently a professor at Princeton University, New Jersey. His primary research interests lie in physical inorganic chemistry.[1] He conducts research in electrochemistry, photochemistry, solids state chemistry, and fuel cells, and is known for his work on alternate energy solutions involving processes and materials for photo-reduction and electro-reduction.[2][3][4]
Education and career
Bocarsly graduated with a B.S., magna cum laude, from the University of California, Los Angeles with a double major in chemistry and physics (June 1976). There he worked with John Gladysz on research involving metal vapor synthesis. In June 1980 he received his PhD from Massachusetts Institute of Technology for research on charge transfer processes on semiconductors. Starting in 1980, he was assistant and associate professor at Princeton University where he is currently full professor. Bocarsly currently teaches the second course of the introductory General Chem sequence at Princeton. [5]
President's Undergraduate Research Fellowship UCLA (1975)
Footnotes
^American Chemical Society. Committee on Professional Training (2005). Directory of Graduate Research. Washington: American Chemical Society. pp. 799–800.
^Yan, Yong; Zeitler, Elizabeth L.; Gu, Jing; Hu, Yuan; Bocarsly, Andrew B. (17 September 2013). "Electrochemistry of Aqueous Pyridinium: Exploration of a Key Aspect of Electrocatalytic Reduction of CO to Methanol". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 135 (38): 14020–14023. doi:10.1021/ja4064052. PMID23972003.
^Barton, Emily E.; Rampulla, David M.; Bocarsly, Andrew B. (May 2008). "Selective Solar-Driven Reduction of CO to Methanol Using a Catalyzed p-GaP Based Photoelectrochemical Cell". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 130 (20): 6342–6344. doi:10.1021/ja0776327. PMID18439010.
^Barton Cole, Emily; Lakkaraju, Prasad S.; Rampulla, David M.; Morris, Amanda J.; Abelev, Esta; Bocarsly, Andrew B. (25 August 2010). "Using a One-Electron Shuttle for the Multielectron Reduction of CO to Methanol: Kinetic, Mechanistic, and Structural Insights". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 132 (33): 11539–11551. doi:10.1021/ja1023496. PMID20666494.