Profile
Saiful Islam joined the Department of Materials as Statutory Chair in Materials Modelling in January 2022, after moving from the University of Bath. He grew up in Crouch End, London and obtained his Chemistry degree and PhD (1988) from University College London (with Richard Catlow FRS), followed by a Postdoctoral Fellowship at the Eastman Kodak Labs, New York, USA. He returned to the UK to the University of Surrey, and was then appointed Professor of Materials Chemistry at the University of Bath in 2006, before joining Oxford in 2022. He is also Professorial Fellow at St Anne's College Oxford. He currently serves on the RSC Board of Trustees and is a Patron of Humanists UK.
Research
Saiful's research interests encompass major contributions to the deeper understanding of atomistic processes in energy materials, especially those related to lithium batteries and perovskite solar cells. Recent efforts have focused on:
(a) Li-rich cathode materials for lithium-ion batteries (he leads the Faraday Institution CATMAT project on next-generation cathode materials)
(b) new solid electrolytes for lithium and sodium solid-state batteries
(c) 3D and 2D halide perovskite materials for solar cells.
Awards/Honours
His research has been recognised with several awards including the 2022 Royal Society Hughes Medal, the 2020 American Chemical Society Storch Award in Energy Chemistry and the 2017 Royal Society of Chemistry Peter Day Award for Materials Chemistry. He is Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry (FRSC), Fellow of the Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining (FIMMM) and Honorary Fellow of the British Science Association. In 2019, he declined the award of an OBE and outlines why here.
Outreach/Media
Saiful presented the Royal Institution Christmas Lectures in 2016 for BBC TV on the theme of energy and has a Guinness World Record for the highest voltage lemon battery.
He was interviewed in 2019 by Jim Al-Khalili for 'The Life Scientific' on BBC Radio 4 and presented an invited talk at the Brian Cox & Robin Ince Compendium of Reason 2022 charity event to 4,000+ people at the Royal Albert Hall. Here is a short Q&A for the Humanists-UK newsletter.
Link to group website Link to publications Twitter @SaifulChemistry