News

Väisälä Award to Professor Peter Liljeroth

Liljeroth was awarded for his research contributions. The award is worth 15 000 euros.

The Finnish Academy of Science and Letters has granted a Väisälä award to Professor Peter Liljeroth.

The Väisälä Foundations awards have been granted since 2000 and are given to 1-3 active researchers yearly.

Liljeroth defended his dissertation in 2002 from Helsinki University of Technology. After postdoctoral stays at Utrecht University and IBM Zurich Research Laboratory, he worked as an assistant professor at Utrecht University. Liljeroth was appointed as Professor in Physics at Aalto University in 2011.

At Aalto, Peter Liljeroth leads the experimental Atomic Scale Physics group which focuses on studies of atomically well-defined graphene nanostructures and molecular self-assembly on graphene using low-temperature scanning probe microscopies. He is also a teamleader in the Low Temperature Quantum Phenomena and Devices Center of Excellence, and in the Centre for Quantum Engineering.

Liljeroth is delighted with the honour.

- The thrill in basic research is about finding out how things work. Sometimes, the surprising results turn out to be the most rewarding. I am very happy that The Finnish Academy of Science and Letters has decided to acknowledge my work.

Peter Liljeroth is a leading nanoscience researcher of his generation. He has been awarded the highly competed European Research Council (ERC) grant for his research. His work has been published in Science and the Nature journals.

Photo by Anni Hanén

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Juha Gogulski, kuva: Matti Ahlgren, Aalto-yliopisto
Research & Art Published:

Juha Gogulski develops personalized brain stimulation therapy for depression

Aalto University postdoctoral researcher and Instrufoundation Fellow grant recipient Juha Gogulski is developing individualized brain stimulation treatments for patients with depression.
Lecture hall with students watching a man present slides on electrically heated textiles at the front
Research & Art Published:

Babak defends PhD thesis on electrically heating bio-based textiles

Babak Abdi publicly defended his doctoral thesis.
Iris Seitz
Awards and Recognition Published:

Iris Seitz awarded for exceptional early-career achievement

Dr. Iris Seitz, former PhD student of Professor Mauri Kostiainen, has been awarded the 2026 Robert Dirks Molecular Programming Prize for her work on programmable protein architectures with nucleic acid origami.
Lecturer in a modern auditorium presenting a slide titled “Merging Textiles and Electronics – and Beyond”.
Research & Art Published:

Invited Talk: Swedish Expert Explores the Future of E-Textiles

The Textile Chemistry Group of the Department of Bioproducts and Biosystems organized an invited talk on March 26.