Jump to content

Julie Grollier

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Julie Grollier
Born1975
Alma materSupélec
University of Caen Normandy
École normale supérieure
Université Pierre et Marie Curie (PhD)
Scientific career
Fieldsspintronics, magnetic storage
InstitutionsCNRS/Thales [fr]
ThesisRenversement d'aimantation par injection d'un courant polarisé en spin (2003)
Doctoral advisorAlbert Fert

Julie Grollier is a French physicist working in the field of spintronics. She won the Irène Joliot-Curie Prize from the French Academy of Sciences in 2021.[1]

Education and career

[edit]

Grollier studied[2] at the French engineering school Supélec, before doing an internship in the Laboratory of Cristallography and Materials Science at the University of Caen Normandy. She then conducted her doctoral research at École normale supérieure Paris-Saclay under the supervision of Nobel prize laureate Albert Fert, working on magnetization reversal by the injection of spin-current injection. She later joined the University of Groningen in the Netherlands and then the Centre for Nanosciences and Nanotechnologies (formerly known as Institut d'Electronique Fondamentale, in France), as a postdoctoral fellow working on the magnetization dynamics of nano-magnets. She joined the joint research unit CNRS/Thales [fr] in 2005.[3]

Recognition

[edit]

Grollier was awarded the CNRS Silver Medal in 2018,[4] and the Irène Joliot-Curie Prize from the French Academy of Sciences in 2021.[5]

In 2015, she was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS), after a nomination from the APS Topical Group on Magnetism and its Applications, "for measurements of spin-transfer torque dynamics and the development of devices to implement biologically inspired computing".[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Julie Grollier profile – CNRS
  2. ^ Julie Grollier – World Economic Forum
  3. ^ Julie Grollier – Unité Mixte de Physique CNRS/Thales
  4. ^ 82 Nouveaux Talents du CNRS – CNRS
  5. ^ Academie de Sciences – Twitter
  6. ^ "Fellows nominated in 2015 by the Topical Group on Magnetism and its Applications". APS Fellows archive. American Physical Society. Retrieved 2021-11-29.
[edit]