Profile

2018-08-29

Dr. Song Xuefeng, Research Associate Professor, Master Tutor. Born in Shijiazhuang City, Hebei Province in 1980, he graduated from the School of Physics of Peking University in 2009 with a Ph.D. degree in physics. He is mainly engaged in teaching and research in the fields of nano-carbon materials and devices, MEMS sensors and their applications, and scientific instruments. Dr. Song has worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the Helsinki University of Technology in Finland. He has served as the head of the OVLounasmaa laboratory in Finland, the Finnish Academy of Sciences project #259912 (PI), a researcher in the Department of Applied Physics at Aalto University in Finland, and joined the School of Innovation and Entrepreneurship, Southern University of Science and Technology in 2017, holding the post of Associate Professor at the Innovation Center for Key Scientific Instruments. He hosted the Finnish National Academy of Sciences project "Using graphene nanomechanical resonators to approximate the quantum limit of thermal motion", and involved the MEMS RF front-end mixer pre-research project of Helsinki University of Technology and Nokia, RODIN suspended graphene nanostructure project under the EU FP7 framework, and research on quantum graphene resonators in the Graphene Flagship of the European Union. He has published more than 30 papers and obtained more than ten international invention patents.

Research Arears

Scientific instrument, nano materials and quantum device, graphene and MEMS sensor

Professional Experience

2009-2012,Post-doctor in Helsinki University of Technology (TKK), Finland;

2012-2015,PI of Finnish Academy Project #259912 in O. V. Lounasmaa lab;

2016-2017,Senior researcher in the Department of Applied Physics, Aalto University, Finland;

2017 onwards: Associate Professor in the College of Innovation and Entrepreneurship, SUSTech, China.

Education

1999-2003, He studied in the Department of Physics of Peking University and got his Bachelors’ degree;

2003-2009, He studied Condensed Matter Physics in the School of Physics of Peking University and got his PhD degree.