James K Utterback
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James K Utterback
@jamesutterback.bsky.social
Physical Chemist
| CNRS researcher at INSP of Sorbonne
| Former postdoc Berkeley, PhD Boulder
| Rock music recording artist
| 🇺🇲 → 🇫🇷
| Website: https://w3.insp.upmc.fr/en/insp-page-perso/utterback-james/
Reposted by James K Utterback
🇪🇺 The European Research Council has just announced the winners of its 'Starting' grants which provide substantial funding for projects involving young researchers. The CNRS is the host institution for 18 grant-winning projects. #HorizonEU
The winners of 2025 ERC Starting Grants from the CNRS
The European Research Council (ERC) has just announced the winners of its 'Starting' grants which provide substantial funding for projects inv
www.cnrs.fr
September 4, 2025 at 11:52 AM
I am extremely grateful to announce that I have received the ERC Starting Grant! This is a huge step and it means exciting opportunities for my group in the near future.
📣 The ERC Starting Grant call results are out!

Find out which early-career researchers will receive funding this year, what they will be investigating, where they will be based... plus lots of other #ERCStG facts & figures for 2025!

➡️ buff.ly/IsafuFh

#FrontierResearch 🇪🇺#EUfunded #HorizonEurope
September 4, 2025 at 12:36 PM
Nanocrystal folks: Join us at nanoGe MATSUS in Valencia, Oct 20-24 2025. The theme will be Emergent Properties in Nanomaterials. The invited speaker line-up is really exciting!
- Deadline for contributed talks: June 27
- Deadline for posters: Sept 22
www.nanoge.org/MATSUSFall25...
June 13, 2025 at 9:54 AM
Paper #3 from the group!

We image thermal transport down to monolayer nanocrystal superlattices. In that regime ballistic phonon transport takes effect.

This was possible thanks to the beautiful samples from Florian Schulz.

advanced.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
Inverted Thickness Dependence of Thermal Transport in Nanocrystal Supercrystals Down to the Monolayer
Spatiotemporal thermoreflectance microscopy locally probes lateral thermal transport in ultrathin colloidal nanocrystal supercrystals. In stark contrast to typical materials, the thermal diffusivity ...
advanced.onlinelibrary.wiley.com
May 19, 2025 at 1:01 PM
Very excited for the 2nd paper from my group to be out in Nano Letters ! We demonstrate how both charge carriers and heat contribute to pump-probe spectroscopy of nanocrystal films. doi.org/10.1021/acs....
Simultaneous Electronic and Thermal Signatures in Pump–Probe Spectroscopy of Semiconductor Nanocrystal Films
Thermal contributions are typically ignored in optical spectroscopy of semiconductor nanomaterials. However, such considerations are important for an accurate interpretation of spectroscopy measurements. Here, we identify signatures of transient photoinduced heating in optical pump–probe signals of colloidal semiconductor nanocrystal films. We find that lattice heating following excitation above the bandgap or at high fluences leads to a significant temperature-induced transient signal that impacts three aspects of pump–probe measurements: the transient spectra, relaxation kinetics, and spatiotemporally resolved carrier diffusivity. The effects are general across nanocrystal core material, appearing in both CdSe and PbS quantum dot films. This study proposes several methods for distinguishing simultaneous electronic and thermal contributions to transient measurements as well as guidelines for how to avoid misassignments. On the other hand, we discuss the ability to track both electronic and thermal transport as a largely missed opportunity that can be leveraged.
doi.org
April 11, 2025 at 8:48 AM
Very excited to share the first publication of my independent group in ACS Nano! We control, model and visualize heat transport anisotropy
in supercrystals self-assembled from colloidal nanocrystals. Big thanks to the many collaborators! #matsky pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Anisotropic Thermal Transport in Tunable Self-Assembled Nanocrystal Supercrystals
Realizing tunable functional materials with built-in nanoscale heat flow directionality represents a significant challenge that could advance thermal management strategies. Here we use spatiotemporally resolved thermoreflectance to visualize lateral thermal transport anisotropy in self-assembled supercrystals of anisotropic Au nanocrystals. Correlative electron and thermoreflectance microscopy reveal that nano- to mesoscale heat predominantly flows along the long-axis of the anisotropic nanocrystals, and does so across grain boundaries and curved assemblies while voids disrupt heat flow. We finely control the anisotropy via the aspect ratio of constituent nanorods, and it exceeds the aspect ratio for nanobipyramid supercrystals and certain nanorod arrangements. Finite element simulations and effective medium modeling rationalize the emergent anisotropic behavior in terms of a simple series resistance model, further providing a framework for estimating thermal anisotropy as a function of material and structural parameters. Self-assembly of colloidal nanocrystals promises an interesting route to direct heat flow in a wide range of applications that utilize this important class of materials.
pubs.acs.org
December 12, 2024 at 8:46 PM
Hello Bluesky! Joining this community to connect and share our group's research in #matsky #physics and #chemsky
December 12, 2024 at 9:39 AM