ºÚÁÏÍø

News

The first installation talks of 2018 now available on video

Aalto's newly tenured professors reveal the secrets of carbon nanomaterials for health applications and origins and beneficiaries of invention.
Kuvassa vasemmalta professori Günther H. Filz, professori Otto Toivanen, rehtori Ilkka Niemelä ja professori Tomi Laurila. Kuva: Lasse Lecklin. Aalto-yliopisto

As part of the university's tenure track career system, the newly appointed tenured professors delivered their installation talks on their own research 31 January 2018. The videos of the talks are available on Aalto University's YouTube channel. The lectures are in English.

Günther H. Filz, School of Engineering / School of Arts, Design and Architecture:
"Form Matters and Why Form matters in fat-free Design"

Tomi Laurila, School of Electrical Engineering:
"Carbon nanomaterials for health applications"

Otto Toivanen, School of Business:
"Origins and beneficiaries of invention"

See also: Tenured Professors' Installation Talks - Aalto University

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

3D brain scan on screen showing colourful neural pathways inside a semi-transparent head model
Research & Art Published:

Applications open for Innovation Postdoc in AI

A fully funded, 12–month career track to turn your doctoral discoveries into a deep-tech startup.
primo.aalto.fi main page
Research & Art Published:

Aalto-Primo has been updated

Aalto-Primo has been upgraded to a new version.
Erdal Aydin
Appointments Published:

Erdal Aydin has been appointed as a fixed term Associate Professor at the Department of Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering

PhD Erdal Aydin has been appointed as a five year fixed-term Associate Professor at the Department of Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering as of 1 September 2026. The field of the professorship is Control and Automation of Chemical Processes.
Person in winter coat charges a snowy electric car
Research & Art Published:

Electricity supply in Finland could face a major test in the 2030s as EV charging drives demand

As EVs become more common, the scheduling of their charging could help secure electricity adequacy, especially in winter.