Poor
Dr. Fang is an expert on ochem, but this semester was particularly interesting. He is not so friendly, and he gets irritated when people ask him questions. He began giving us pop quizzes at random intervals halfway through the class, and the homework was always difficult to complete. Finally, he gave us a curve, and I was pleased with my final score.
Awesome
Doctor Fang wants his students to succeed. He strives to help his students in any way he can. He does give pop quizzes, so make sure to show up. His homework is on the owl and it may take some time to finish. Overall, he's the best professor at Texas A&M University.
Texas A&M University College Station - Chemistry
Assistant Professor at Texas A&M University
Higher Education
Lei
Fang
College Station, Texas
I obtained my PhD at Northwestern University with Professor Fraser Stoddart. My graduate research was focused on switchable interlocked organic molecules and their applications on cutting-edge nanotechnology. I conducted my postdoc research program in Professor Zhenan Bao's group at Stanford University, primarily investigating single molecular electronics and organic semiconductors.
I moved to Texas A&M University in the summer of 2013 to become an assistant professor in the chemistry department. I teach organic chemistry and polymer chemistry classes in TAMU. The multi-disciplinary research programs in my group focus on the bottom-up synthesis and processing of novel organic polymer materials for the applications on electronics and energy conversion/storage.
Teaching Assistant
Lei worked at UCLA as a Teaching Assistant
Assistant Professor
Tenure-track assistant professor in the Chemistry Department.
Research Assistant
-- Organic Synthesis
-- Polymer Chemistry
-- Physical Organic Research
-- Supramolecular Chemistry
Postdoctoral Fellow
-- Organic Electronics
-- Polymer Synthesis and Characterization
-- Surface Chemistry
-- Electronic Device Fabrication
N/A
Chemistry
MPhil
Chemistry
PhD
Chemistry
Thesis: Expanding the Scope on Switchable Mechanically Interlocked Molecules
Research Assistant
-- Organic Synthesis
-- Polymer Chemistry
-- Physical Organic Research
-- Supramolecular Chemistry
Journal of the American Chemical Society
The past couple of years have witnessed a remarkable burst in the development of organic field-effect transistors (OFETs), with a number of organic semiconductors surpassing the benchmark mobility of 10 cm2/(V s). In this perspective, we highlight some of the major milestones along the way to provide a historical view of OFET development, introduce the integrated molecular design concepts and process engineering approaches that lead to the current success, and identify the challenges ahead to make OFETs applicable in real applications.
The following profiles may or may not be the same professor: