Shengda is interested in electrochemical processes and related surface changes at nanoscale. He is now a PhD working on in-situ TEM of liquid battery cells under the supervision of Dr. Alex Robertson and Prof. Peter Bruce in Oxford.
Before coming to Oxford, Shengda obtained his BEng degree in Materials from Imperial College London. He then worked as an MPhil research student under the supervision of Dr. Steve Ooi and Sir. Harry Bhadeshia at University of Cambridge where he studied the hydrogen behaviors during phase transformation in steels.
Email: shengda.pu@queens.ox.ac.uk
Shengda is interested in electrochemical processes and related surface changes at nanoscale. He is now a PhD working on in-situ TEM of liquid battery cells under the supervision of Dr. Alex Robertson and Prof. Peter Bruce in Oxford.
Before coming to Oxford, Shengda obtained his BEng degree in Materials from Imperial College London. He then worked as an MPhil research student under the supervision of Dr. Steve Ooi and Sir. Harry Bhadeshia at University of Cambridge where he studied the hydrogen behaviors during phase transformation in steels.
Email: shengda.pu@queens.ox.ac.uk
Shengda is interested in electrochemical processes and related surface changes at nanoscale. He is now a PhD working on in-situ TEM of liquid battery cells under the supervision of Dr. Alex Robertson and Prof. Peter Bruce in Oxford.
Before coming to Oxford, Shengda obtained his BEng degree in Materials from Imperial College London. He then worked as an MPhil research student under the supervision of Dr. Steve Ooi and Sir. Harry Bhadeshia at University of Cambridge where he studied the hydrogen behaviors during phase transformation in steels.
Email: shengda.pu@queens.ox.ac.uk
ROBERTSON GROUP
University of Warwick
Yi Yuan - DPhil Student
Yi is now working as a DPhil student under the supervision of Dr. Alex Robertson and Prof. Peter Bruce. Her research project focuses on understanding the degradation mechanisms of Li metal anode via in-situ electron microscopy.
Before coming to Oxford, Yi attained her master's degree in Chemistry from the National Center for Nanoscience and Technology of Chinese Academy of Science and Beihang University. Her prior research mainly involved the thermal catalysis based on MOF materials and controllable synthesis of all-inorganic perovskite nanocrystals.
Email: yi.yuan@materials.ox.ac.uk