Simon Hall (chemist)


Simon Robert Hall FRSC FHEA is Professor of Chemistry at the University of Bristol. He is currently the Head of Inorganic and Materials Chemistry.

Education

Born in Stratford-Upon-Avon, Hall grew up in Tiverton, Devon. He attended Tiverton Comprehensive School, where he played rhythm guitar in the band of future 3 Colours Red frontman Pete Vuckovic. On leaving school, he worked for Reuters Ltd. as a stocks and bonds pricing analyst, simultaneously studying for a BSc degree with the Open University. On graduating with a 2:1 degree in Chemistry with Geology in 1997, he joined the laboratories of Professor Stephen Mann at the University of Bristol to read for a PhD in Materials Chemistry. His doctoral research degree involved the creation of novel nanomaterials using a biomimetic approach and also the first ever electron diffraction study on the phylum Bryozoa.

Research

Hall's research is concerned with the control of crystal growth, both organic and inorganic. His research activities include biomimetic materials chemistry, synthesis of nanoscale functional materials and control of organic crystal growth. In 2006, he published the first synthesis of single-crystal, high-temperature superconductor nanowires. Subsequent work on these systems led to his demonstration of the microcrucible growth mechanism; a nanowire growth mechanism that had been predicted, but never observed up until that point. His current work is focused on the creation of novel organic crystals for pharmaceutical and optoelectronic research and in the creation of novel forms of high temperature superconductors. Hall has published over 130 scientific papers with a current h-index of 36 and over 5,800 citations.
Professor Hall delivered his Inaugural Lecture in the Wills Memorial building on October 24, 2023, titled "". The lecture can be viewed on YouTube by clicking on the lecture title above.

Awards and memberships

Hall was admitted as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry in 2018. In the same year, he was made a Visiting Professor of Chemistry, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan. In 2016, he was made a Visiting Professor of Materials Science at Nagaoka University of Technology, Japan. In 2015, Hall was awarded the International Fellowship; one of only 12 awarded Worldwide in the Natural Sciences in that year. In the same year he won the Nanotechnology Platform Japan Prize from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology,, for his discovery of the microcrucible growth mechanism in nanowires. In 2013 he was made a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. In 2004, Hall was awarded a Royal Society University Research Fellowship for his proposal on 'Biotemplated Routes to Advanced Superconductors'.