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Dr Shunmin Zhu, who is a Marie Curie Fellow working at the Department of Engineering, will join a cohort of outstanding young scientists from around the world at the prestigious 73rd Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting.

Dr Shunmin Zhu will join a cohort of outstanding young scientists from more than 90 nations at the prestigious 73rd Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting. The meeting will take place from 30 June to 5 July 2024 in Lindau, Germany, and will be attended by 650 Young Scientists from throughout the world. 30 Nobel Laureates will also be taking part in the meeting, which this year is dedicated to physics. More than 130 academic partners worldwide – academies, universities and foundations – nominated the candidates for participation after internal application procedures. Established in 1951, the aim of the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings is to bring together world-leading pioneers in science with outstanding young scientists from around the world. The theme of the Lindau Meetings alternates between the three Nobel Prize scientific disciplines, physics, chemistry or physiology/medicine. Dr Shunmin Zhu is a Marie Curie Fellow working in the Energy Systems Research Group (led by Professor Tony Roskilly) at Department of Engineering. His research aims to develop advanced thermal energy technologies for power, heating and cooling that can minimize primary-energy use and reduce CO2 emissions. Dr Zhu said, "I believe attending the 73rd Lindau meeting is expected to exert a significant impact on my future career prospects, since it will give me a rare opportunity to share ideas with the worldwide best researchers of the past, present and future”.

Find out more about the work of Dr Shunmin Zhu HERE

Learn more about the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting HERE

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