Friedrich (Fritz) B. Prinz Ph.D.
| Position |
Department / Business Unit |
| Professor of Mechanical Engineering; Chair, Department of Mechanical Engineering |
Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science |
| Institution |
Disciplines |
| Stanford University |
Engineering |
| City |
State / Provence |
| Stanford |
CA |
| Country |
Website |
| USA |
link
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| Fax |
|
| (650) 725-4862 |
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Professor of Mechanical Engineering and of Materials Science and Engineering; Rodney H. Adams Professor in the School of Engineering. His current work focuses on the design and fabrication of micro and nanoscale devices for energy and biology. Examples include fuel cells and bioreactors.
Professor Prinz is Chair, Mechanical Engineering and Director of the Rapid Prototyping Laboratory at Stanford University. He is interested in mass transport phenomena across thin membranes such as oxide films and lipid bi-layers. His research group studies electro-chemical phenomena with the help of Atomic Force Microscopy, Impedance Spectroscopy, and Quantum Modeling.
Education
Ph.D. University of Vienna - Physics, 1975
Awards
Sir Christopher Hinton Lecture, Royal Academy of Engineering, UK (1991), Engineer-of-the-Year, American Society of Mechanical Engineers (1992) Pittsburgh, PA Section, Austrian Academy of Science, Vienna , Austria (1997), Literati Club Awards for Excellence, London, 2002: Most 'Outstanding Paper' in the 2001 volume of the Rapid Prototyping Journal.
Books
R. S. Greco, R. L. Smith R.L, and F. B. Prinz (eds.), “Nanoscale Technology Applied to Biological Systems”, CRC Press, Publisher (2004).
R. O’Hayre, S. W Cha, and F. B. Prinz, “Fuel Cell Fundamentals”, Course Reader for ME 260, to be published as textbook.
Important Articles
Thin-film SOFCs using gastight YSZ thin films on nanoporous substrates, 2006; Finding narrow passages with probabilistic roadmaps: The small-step retraction method, 2005; Gas-tight alumina films on nanoporous substrates through oxidation of sputtered metal films, 2005; Cantilever tip probe arrays for simultaneous SECM and AFM analysis, 2005.
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