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Sirringhaus Lab

 

Biography

Theo holds a BSc in Physics from the University of Copenhagen, during which he attained research experience from top academic labs at Harvard and UC Berkeley for studying the fundamental physical properties and device applications of low-dimensional materials. Now at Cambridge, Theo studies double-quantum-dot systems in silicon CMOS transistors as a potential method for implementing scalable spin-based quantum computing. In his PhD, he specialises in the manipulation and control of single-electron spins in order to achieve qubit operation.

Publications

Key publications: 

Latest news

Sirringhaus Lab Members Attend innoLAE 2025

20 February 2025

Seven members of the Sirringhaus Lab attended the conference innoLAE (Innovations in Large-Area Electronics) over the previous two days. The event, hosted at Magdalene College, Cambridge , included dozens of talks from both academics and industry experts across a wide range of topics, from applications like biosensors and...

Nernst Effect Paper Published in Nature Communications

11 February 2025

Our paper Observation of Anomalously Large Nernst Effects in Conducting Polymers has now been published in Nature Communications ! While the Nernst effect is well-documented in inorganic semiconductors and metals, this phenomenon is typically negligible in polymers with lower structural order and an inherently low mobility...