“Nanopatterning reconfigurable magnetic landscapes via thermally assisted scanning probe lithography” Nature Nanotechnology, 11, 545–551 ( 2016) (Cover article) “Ultra-hard carbon film from epitaxial two-layer graphene” Nature Nanotechnology 13, ( 2018), doi:10.1038/s4156-9 ”Patterning metal contacts on monolayer MoS 2 with vanishing Schottky barrier using thermal nanolithography”, Nature Electronics 17–25 ( 2019) “Spatial Defects Nanoengineering for Bipolar Conductivity in MoS 2”, Nature Communications (2020) “Nanofabrication of graphene field-effect transistors by thermal scanning probe lithography”, Applied Physics Letters Materials (2021) 9 (1), 011107 “Pressure-induced formation and mechanical properties of 2D diamond boron nitride”, Advanced Science (2021) 8, 2002541. “Cost and Time Effective Lithography of Reusable Millimeter Size Bone Tissue Replicas With Sub‐15 nm Feature Size on A Biocompatible Polymer”, Advanced Functional Materials (2021). Nanotechnology, Nanomechanics, Water, Nanofabrication, 2D materials, Graphene, Nanomedicine She is a Fellow of the American Physical Society. She is widely published, and has received multiple grants from the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, and the Department of Defense. She has also made fundamental contributions in nanomechanics, graphene, diamene, 2D materials, and nano-confined water. She is particularly well known for her pioneering work in thermal scanning probe lithography (tSPL), a novel and sustainable nanofabrication technique with applications in biomedicine, nanoelectronics, and magnetic materials. She then worked as postdoctoral fellow at the Ecole Polytechnic Federale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland. in Physics in 2000 with a joint thesis between the University of Milano, and the European Synchrotron Research Facility (ESRF) in Grenoble, France. Previously, Riedo was Professor of Physics at the Georgia Institute of Technology from 2003 to 2015. She graduated summa cum laude in Physics at the University of Milano, and obtained a Ph.D. She is also Professor of Physics at NYU College of Arts and Science and affiliated Professor of Mechanical Engineering. Elisa Riedo is Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at New York University Tandon School of Engineering.
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