Nano, Energy, Surface, Thin films
Sharif University of Technology
Moshfegh Research Group (NEST)
After receiving a first-class Ph.D. degree in Physics from the University of Houston, Texas (USA) in 1990 and two years as a postdoctoral researcher in the Texas Center for Superconductivity, Professor Moshfegh joined Sharif University of Technology (SUT) in 1992. After twenty years of activities on Experimental Physics on Surfaces, Interfaces, and Thin films, with particular application of Nanostructures on Solar Energy and Catalysis, he established a group called NEST at SUT in 2011. He was appointed as a distinguished professor of Physics at SUT in 2017.
NEST represents our group research activity on the following multidisciplinary fields, namely: Nano, Energy, Surface, and Thin films (NEST), with an emphasis on Solar Energy conversion and applications of efficient Nanostructures and 2D Materials, especially on Photoelectrocatalysis, including Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting, Photodegradation of Dyes/Drugs, and CO2 Reduction to valuable products. In addition, Hydrophilicity/Hydrophobicity of various Surfaces, Thermal/Electrical Conductivity of Polymers, and Supercapacitors are among the other NEST-intersted areas.
Weekly Meeting Schedule
2024 Spring Semester:
Date | Presenter | |
1 | Farvardin 18th | NEWS |
2 | Farvardin 25th | Farahmand - Nemati |
3 | Ordibehesht 1th | Kalalipour - Mokhtari |
4 | Ordibehesht 8th | Dr. Setayesh - Khakpour |
5 | Ordibehesht 15th | The Martyrdom of Imam Jafar Sadiq |
6 | Ordibehesht 22th | Ashrafi - Goodarzi |
7 | Ordibehesht 29th | Behroozi Nejad - Afshari |
8 | Khordad 5th | NEWS |
9 | Khordad 12th | Dr. Sarikhani - Arabshahi |
10 | Khordad 19th | Kolahdozan - Esmaeilpour |
11 | Khordad 26th | Eshghi - Rasooli |
Recent Publications
- An elliptical nanoantenna array plasmonic metasurface for efficient solar energy harvesting
- Chemically-stable flexible transparent electrode: gold-electrodeposited on embedded silver nanowires
- Interfacial Control at Janus WSSe/Triazine g-C3N4 Heterostructures in Developing Type-II and Z-Scheme Photocatalysts