Sow-Hsin Chen


Sow-Hsin Chen, is a Hoklo Taiwanese physicist and Professor Emeritus at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is a recognized pioneer in the research of the dynamic properties of supercooled and interfacial water with the use of neutron scattering techniques. As an educator, he has been recognized for his training of young scientists in the use of those same techniques. Regarding hydrogen storage, his research focuses on the use of activated carbon to allow hydrogen to be stored at room temperature.

Education

Professor Chen received his BS in physics from National Taiwan University, and his MS in physics from National Tsing Hua University. He then came to the U.S. with an International Atomic Energy Agency Fellowship, and obtained an MS in nuclear science from the University of Michigan, and his Ph.D. in physics from McMaster University, Canada, under the Nobel Laureate, Prof. Bertram N. Brockhouse. He received his postdoctoral training at the Atomic Energy Research Establishment in Harwell, U.K. with Professor Peter A. Egelstaff during 1966-1967, and between 1967–1968, he was a Research Fellow at Harvard University with Nobel Laureate, Prof. Nicolaas Bloembergen, before joining the MIT faculty in 1968.

Academic career

Chen was promoted to Full Professor of Applied Radiation Physics at the of MIT in 1974. During his tenure, he initiated and taught courses including "Applied Nuclear Physics" for engineers, "Quantum Theory of Interaction of Radiation with Matter," "Statistical Thermodynamics of Complex Liquids," and "Photons and Neutrons Scattering Spectroscopy in Condensed Matter Physics."

Research and achievements

Chen's major research activity has been in the use of neutron, x-ray and laser scattering spectroscopy to investigate materials properties of complex fluids and soft condensed matter. His research work includes photon correlation spectroscopy studies of the critical dynamics of a binary liquid mixture; neutron scattering studies of the thermodynamics and dynamics of confined water in supercooled states near hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces.
Chen has contributed significantly to the development of the technique of the Photon Correlation Spectroscopy. He constructed the first 128-channel digital photon correlator in the U.S. in 1970 and applied it to investigate critical phenomenon in a binary liquid mixture. This type of digital correlator has since become the basic tool for the modern PCS. He has, since 1970, been applying PCS to studies of dynamic critical phenomena in binary liquid mixtures; the coexistence of critical phenomena and percolation transition in three-component microemulsions and copolymer micellar solutions; and ergodic to non-ergodic transitions when crossing the kinetic glass transition line of a copolymer micellar system with a short-range attraction.
Since 2004, Chen et al. have studied liquid state physics with regard to the structure and dynamics of supercooled water. They studied supercooled confined water by a high-resolution Quasielastic neutron scattering technique, and this has led to the discovery of the likelihood of a second low-temperature critical point in water in 2005. He was reported in Nature as "A physicist ventures into the no-man's land of water to find the source of its unusual properties" Subsequently, one of his peer-reviewed scientific articles received the 2006 PNAS Editorial Board Cozzarelli Award for its outstanding scientific excellence and originality. In 2006, his group discovered a density minimum in deeply supercooled confined water which further demonstrated the plausibility of the existence of the second critical point in supercooled water.
Recently, his work has been highlighted several times in MIT News.

Other Activities

Chen has been active as an organizer of domestic and over 20 international conferences and symposia as well as the NATO Advanced Study Institutes. He served as chairman of a Gordon Conference on Physics and Chemistry of Water in 1986. He has also been active as a consultant to developing countries with regard to their nuclear power development programs. He has served as an advisor to the National Science Council and the Institute of Nuclear Energy Research of the Republic of China, and the Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute of the Republic of Korea on the matter of nuclear power planning and development in the respective countries since 1972. In 2006 and 2008, Chen was the organizer and U.S. Chairman of the first and second Joint Symposia on Neutron Sciences and Technology in China, jointly sponsored by the US National Science Foundation and the Chinese counterpart agencies.
He has been a member of numerous national advisory or review committees, including the U.S. National Pulsed Neutron Sources, IPNS/LANSCE at Argonne National Laboratory, the Solid State and Chemical Technology Divisions of Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the U.S. National Science Foundation's Engineering Research Center, the Basic Energy Sciences Division of the Department of Energy, and the Collaborative Instrumentation Block Grant of the National Institutes of Health. Since 2009, he has been a Beamline Advisory Team member of National Synchrotron Light Source -II of Brookhaven National Laboratory.

Personal life

Chen met Dr. Ching-chih Chen in 1959 while both were studying at the University of Michigan. They married in 1961 and moved to Canada the following summer where completed his doctorate at McMaster University. Together they raised two daughters.

Peer-reviewed publications

Chen's publications include over 360 peer-reviewed journal publications and approximately 80 non-journal publications. These coincide with his diversified research interests, which include bulk and confined water, cement hydration kinetics, colloids, critical phenomena, dynamic light scattering, group theory, hydrogen storage materials, neutron and x-ray inelastic scattering, protein dynamics, x-ray and neutron diffraction and reflectivity, and others. He has served as a member of the Editorial Board of the from 1992 to 1998, and he is an active guest editor of special issues of JPCM and.
Since 1995, special scientific meetings have been organized every five years to bring together over 100 colleagues, former and current students, and friends to honor Sow-Hsin Chen for his continuing contributions to the field of soft-matter physics. The scientific presentations from these meetings have been published in peer-reviewed special journal issues in his honor

Honors and awards

Chen is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Physical Society, and the Neutron Scattering Society of America.
Selected Honors: