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  1. Professor Rachel Oliver is Director of the Cambridge Centre for Gallium Nitride. She leads research projects across the full range of the Centre’s activities, and her personal passion is understanding how the small scale structure of nitride materials effects the performance and properties of devices.

  2. Advances in AFM for the electrical characterization of semiconductors. RA Oliver. Reports on Progress in Physics 71 (7), 076501. , 2008. 231. 2008. Carrier localization mechanisms in In Ga N/GaN quantum wells. D Watson-Parris, MJ Godfrey, P Dawson, RA Oliver, MJ Galtrey, ... Physical Review B 83 (11), 115321.

  3. Professor of Materials Science. MEng University of Oxford. DPhil University of Oxford. Prof Rachel Oliver has benefitted from the University's policies on flexible working, in line with the Department's commitments to the Athena Swan Charter. She was interviewed about her experiences by Chemistry World.

  4. About. Dr Rachel Oliver's research focusses on nitride semiconductors - the materials used in an ever-increasing range of optoelectronic applications from the blue laser diodes inside a...

    • University of Cambridge
  5. Rachel Angharad Oliver FREng FIMMM is a Professor of Materials Science at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of Robinson College, Cambridge. She works on characterisation techniques for gallium nitride materials for dark-emitting diodes and laser diodes.

  6. 2 de dic. de 2022 · Professor Rachel Oliver of the University of Cambridge’s Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy has been awarded a Royal Academy of Engineering Chair in Emerging Technologies. The award is worth £2.5m over ten years to develop emerging technologies with high potential to deliver economic and social benefits to the UK.

  7. Photography: Nick Saffell. When she’s not making atomic-scale changes to create super-efficient light bulbs and cut carbon emissions, Professor Rachel Oliver has her sights set on helping to level-up equality and diversity in science. We speak to her on International Day of Women and Girls in Science (11 February).