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Bradley Stone

Bradley Stone

Professor
Chemical Physics

DH 412A
(408) 924-4938
bradley.stone@sjsu.edu

Research Group Page

Education

B.S., Chemistry with Honors, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1977
Ph.D., Chemical Physics, Indiana University, 1984
Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of California, Irvine, 1984-1985

Research Interests

  • Computational fluid dynamics calculations in microfluidic devices.
  • Aerosol formation in planetary atmospheres.
  • Detection of biogenic precursor molecules in the interstellar medium.
  • Laser spectroscopy.
  • Molecular astrophysics.

Selected Publications

  • B.M. Stone and A.J. de Mello, “Life, the Universe and Microfluidics”, Lab On A Chip 2, 58N-64N, ( 2002).
  • X.D.F. Chillier, B.M. Stone, C. Joblin, F. Salama and L.J. Allamandola, "The D 1( 2B 2g) ®D 0( 2A g) Fluorescence From Matrix-Isolated Perylene CationFollowing Laser Excitation into the D 5( 2B 3g) and D 2( 2B 3g) Electronic States," Journal of Chemical Physics, 116, 5725 ( 2002).
  • X.D.F. Chillier, B.M. Stone, F. Salama, C. Joblin and L.J. Allamandola, "First Detection of an Ultraviolet Transition in an Ionized Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon," Journal of Chemical Physics, 111 449 ( 1999).
  • I.D.W. Samuel, L. Magnani, G. Rumbles, K. Murray, B.M. Stone, S.C. Moratti and A.B. Holmes, “Photoluminescence in poly(3-hexylthiophene)” Proceedings of the International Symposium on Optical Sciences and Engineering, SPIE - International Society for Optical Engineering, San Diego, CA July, 1997.
  • G. Rumbles, L. Magnani, A. DeMello, B.M. Stone, I. Samuel, R. Friend, A. Holmes and S. Moratti, “Chromism and Luminescence in Regioregular poly(3-dodecylthiophene),” Synthetic Metals 76 47 ( 1996).