Natalie Stingelin

Associate Director of Scientific Continuity, SPECS
Chair, School of Materials Science & Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
Editor-in-Chief, ‘Journal of Materials Chemistry C’ (RSC)

Director, Georgia Tech Center for Organic Photonics and Electronics (COPE)

Full Professor, School of Materials Science & Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology

Full Professor, School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology

Natalie Stingelin(-Stutzmann) is Full Professor and Chair of the School of Materials Science & Engineering. She had prior positions at Imperial College London, UK (till end of September 2020), at Queen Mary University of London, UK; the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Zürich, Switzerland; the Philips Research Laboratories in Eindhoven, the Netherlands; and the Cavendish Laboratories, University of Cambridge, UK. Natalie Stingelin was elected a 2021 Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors, a 2019 Fellow of the Materials Research Society; and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry since 2012. She was awarded a prestigious “Engineering and Physical Science” Suffrage Science award in 2021 — an award that celebrates women in science for their outstanding scientific research, communication work, and support of women in STEM. In 2021, she furthermore was selected for the French-British Price by the French Society of Chemistry and the UK’s Royal Society of Chemistry. She moreover held a Chaire Internationale Associée by the Excellence Initiative of the Université de Bordeaux from 2017-2022, and obtained the Institute of Materials, Minerals & Mining's Rosenhain Medal and Prize (2014) and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) President's International Fellowship Initiative (PIFI) Award for Visiting Scientists (2015). She was an External Senior Fellow at the Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies (2010-2012) and was the Chair of the 2016 Gordon Conference on 'Electronic Processes in Organic Materials' as well as the Zing conference on ‘Organic Semiconductors’ and more recently of the International Conference on Organic Electronics (ICOE) 2018, to name a few examples. She spoke at the World Economic Forum, Davos, in 2016, about polymers for photonics.

Degree(s)

  • Ph.D. in Materials Science and Engineering, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Zurich, Switzerland
  • Dipl. Werkstoffing. (“Masters” in Materials Science and Engineering), (ETH) Zurich, Switzerland