This website is no longer updated.

As of 1.10.2022, the Faculty of Physics has been merged into the TUM School of Natural Sciences with the website https://www.nat.tum.de/. For more information read Conversion of Websites.

de | en

Wolfram Prandl Prize for Anatoliy Senyshyn

German neutron researchers award TUM physicist

2016-10-07 – News from the Physics Department

The Wolfram Prandl Prize for research with neutrons has once more been awarded to a young scientist at TUM: Dr. Anatoliy Senyshyn received the prize for his outstanding research in the field of lithium-ion batteries. He observes the functioning of batteries in a live hook-up at the atomic level. The German “Komitee Forschung mit Neutronen” (KFN) awards the prize every second year to a young scientist.

Award ceremony Wolfram Prandl prize
The newly crowned winner between the eulogist Prof. W. Petry (left) and the Chairman of KFN Prof. T. Unruh (right) is happy about the recognition of his achievements for battery research. – Photo: KFN

Senyshyn has contributed not only with new methods for more precise exploration of lithium batteries; he also shares them generously with the large community of battery researchers. So he developed a method that allows to examine the spatially resolved distribution of lithium in the anode, cathode and the intermediate areas, says Prof. Winfried Petry in the honour of the prize winner. Not only can batteries be investigated with neutrons during their intended use, but also in cases of misuse. For battery researchers this is an experience like they have astronomers when viewed through a strong telescope in clear air. Petry comes up with even more acclamation: “His work has not only revolutionized our knowledge of the functioning of these batteries, they also enable developing new models with much better properties.”

Dr. Anatoliy Senyshyn was born in 1979 in Boryslav, a small town in western Ukraine, and studied physics at the National Polytechnic University of Lviv. There he received his doctorate in 2005 with a theme from the solid state physics, and then moved as a postdoc to the University of Darmstadt. So the way led him 2005 to Garching, because, as a Darmstadt scientist, he took over together with others the responsibility for the powder diffraction spectrometer SPODI at the neutron source.

The Wolfram Prandl Prize by the “Komitee für Forschung mit Neutronen” was awarded 2002 for the first time for outstanding research with neutrons. Methods’ development and fundamental physics should be explicitly included in the analysis when electing. The prize is funded by the centers HZG, HZB, FRM II, ILL JCNS and equal parts and has been awarded every two years to a candidate without an offered chair and younger than 40 years.

Top of page