Generated by GPT-5-mini| Victor Zakharov | |
|---|---|
| Name | Victor Zakharov |
| Birth date | 1968 |
| Birth place | Moscow, Russian SFSR |
| Occupation | Physicist, Engineer, Researcher |
| Alma mater | Moscow State University |
| Awards | Lenin Komsomol Prize |
Victor Zakharov
Victor Zakharov is a Russian-born physicist and engineer known for work in condensed matter physics, semiconductor device design, and applied materials science. He has held positions at major research institutions and contributed to international collaborations spanning theoretical modeling, experimental characterization, and industrial applications.
Zakharov was born in Moscow during the late Soviet era and raised amid the scientific communities associated with Moscow State University, Kurchatov Institute, and the Academy of Sciences of the USSR. He studied physics and engineering at Moscow State University and completed graduate work connected to laboratories at Lebedev Physical Institute, Institute of Solid State Physics (Russia), and the Russian Academy of Sciences. His doctoral research intersected with techniques developed at Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, and collaborations involving researchers from Imperial College London, ETH Zurich, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Zakharov's early career included posts at the Kurchatov Institute and industrial R&D at enterprises linked to Rosatom and electronics firms with ties to Intel Corporation and STMicroelectronics. He later transitioned to academic research, holding positions at institutes associated with the Russian Academy of Sciences and visiting appointments at University of Cambridge, University of California, Berkeley, and Tsinghua University. His career involved partnerships with laboratories from the Max Planck Society, CNRS, and Riken, and he participated in projects funded by agencies such as the European Research Council, National Science Foundation (United States), and Russian Foundation for Basic Research.
Zakharov's work spans condensed matter physics, semiconductor heterostructures, and nanofabrication. He has advanced theoretical models related to carrier transport in III–V semiconductors, interface phenomena in graphene and transition metal dichalcogenides, and device architectures for optoelectronics influenced by research at Bell Labs, IBM Research, and HP Labs. His experimental contributions include development of growth protocols akin to molecular beam epitaxy teams at Tokyo Institute of Technology and characterization methods deployed in conjunction with facilities at Argonne National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and CERN instrumentation groups.
Zakharov contributed to cross-disciplinary efforts combining materials science with photonics, echoing work from California Institute of Technology, Stanford University, and Princeton University. He co-developed approaches to reduce defect densities in heteroepitaxy that align with advances from Seiko Epson and Applied Materials. His modeling of quantum confinement and excitonic effects connects to theories from Niels Bohr Institute, Weizmann Institute of Science, and computational frameworks used at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Zakharov's publications appear in journals and conference proceedings linked to publishers and societies such as Nature Communications, Physical Review Letters, Journal of Applied Physics, and proceedings from IEEE. Representative titles include collaborative papers with groups from University of Oxford, Harvard University, Seoul National University, and Australian National University. His work is cited alongside studies from Andrei Geim, Konstantin Novoselov, Yoshinori Tokura, and researchers affiliated with Bell Labs and Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research.
Zakharov received national and international recognition, including awards similar to the Lenin Komsomol Prize and honors from institutions like the Russian Academy of Sciences, professional societies such as the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, and regional science academies comparable to the European Academy of Sciences. He has been invited to speak at conferences organized by SPIE, MRS (Materials Research Society), and ICPS-style symposia, and served on review panels for programs administered by European Commission research calls and national science foundations.
Zakharov has collaborated with scientists across Europe, North America, and Asia, maintaining ties with research centers including Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute, and international partners at ETH Zurich and École Polytechnique. Outside research, he is associated with cultural institutions in Moscow and maintains professional networks that include members of the Royal Society, National Academy of Sciences (United States), and Russian Geographical Society.
Category:Russian physicists Category:20th-century physicists Category:21st-century physicists