Andreas Dirk Wieck
Chair of Applied Solid State Physics
Ruhr University Bochum
Germany
Andreas Dirk Wieck was born in Hamburg on June 8, 1958, Germany. After studies of
physics at the University of Hamburg, he got his Diploma in Physics 1984, discovering a
spin-splitting of the parallel excited intersubband-resonance in electron inversion layers
on Si(110), originating in the spin-orbit-coupling and known today as the Rashba-effect.
Then, he moved to the High Magnet Field Laboratory in Grenoble (France) to perform
THz-spectroscopy on low-dimensional charge carrier systems in semiconductors in high
magnetic fields, leading to the intersubband-cyclotron-coupling in Si and GaAs. He
finished these studies 1987 with the PhD in Physics (Dr. rer. nat.) at the University of
Hamburg und the guidance of Prof. J�rg Kotthaus. At this time, he prepared the first
superconducting contacts on high-TC-superconductors which he published in 2
monographies. 1987 � 1993, he worked as a postdoc in the MPI-FKF Stuttgart under the
guidance of Prof. Klaus H. Ploog in the groups of Prof. Hans Queisser and Prof. Klaus
von Klitzing. In 1992 � 1993, he took a sabbatical in the NTT basic research labs, Tokyo
(Japan). Since 1993, Prof. Wieck holds a full professorship (�Applied Solid-State
Physics�) at the Ruhr-Universit�t Bochum. In 2004 � 2005, Prof. Wieck has been
appointed by the CNRS (Paris) as a �directeur de recherche� at the CHREA in Sophia
Antipolis (France). In the following periods (2007 � 2008) and (2011 � 2012) he
performed sabbaticals at this CHREA Sophia Antipolis (France). Prof. Wieck received
1990 the Philip Morris Prize for the invention of the �In-Plane-Gate-Transistor�, together
with Prof. Klaus von Klitzing. His research interests are IIIV-Molecular Beam Epitaxy
(MBE), Focussed Ion Beams, low dimensional quantum systems and nanoelectronics.
Prof. Wieck runs actually one of the most performant MBE-groups in Germany with
cooperations worldwide. He holds currently about 1250 peer-reviewed papers in
international journals, 50 of them having high impact, as well as 5 patents, leading to an
h-index of 69 (google scholar). There are more than 60 PhDs which finished in
meantime in the group of Prof. Wieck and left in different industrial and scientific
directions, 5 of them occupying already professorships around the world in the research
field of applied solid state physics.