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Shaoli Fang

Shaoli Fang

Associate Research Professor - Nanotech Institute
 
972-883-6540
BE2314B

Professional Preparation

Ph.D. - Materials Science
Institute for Molecular Science, Japan - 1994
M.S. - Solid State Physics
Chinese Academy of Sciences - 1991
B.S. - Physics
Jilin University - 1987

Research Areas

RESEARCH INTERESTS
  • Functional Nanomaterials
  • Carbon Nanotubes
  • Artificial Muscles
  • Energy Harvesting and Storage
  • Nanoscale Self-Assembly
  • Nanomaterials Processing
  • Nanoscale Devices
  • Electrochemical Devices
  • Elastic Conductors
  • Smart Textiles
  • Electrospinning
  • New Forms of Carbon
  • Sensors 
  • Auxetic Materials


OVERVIEW
Shaoli Fang is an Associate Research Professor at the Alan G. MacDiarmid NanoTech Institute at the University of Texas at Dallas (UTD). He earned his Ph.D. in Materials Science from the Institute for Molecular Science in Japan in 1994. Prior to joining the NanoTech Institute in 2004, Dr. Fang held various technical and management leadership roles in the semiconductor, telecommunications, and nanotechnology industries.

Dr. Fang is a highly cited researcher with over 150 peer-reviewed publications, including 19 high-impact papers in leading journals such as Science and the Nature series. His work has garnered over 22,100 citations, with an h-index of 57 and an i10-index of 105. Notably, eleven of his publications have received more than 500 citations each.

As one of the key inventors of the Carbon Nanotube (CNT) Yarn and Sheet platform at the NanoTech Institute, Dr. Fang’s research provides the foundational infrastructure for the laboratory’s current research portfolio. His work focuses on the fundamental physics and practical application of advanced nanomaterials, specifically carbon nanotube sheets, yarns, and polymer fiber actuators. He specializes in the development of artificial muscles, high-efficiency mechanical actuators, and energy harvesters that bridge the gap between material science and wearable, intelligent textile technologies.

In recognition of his pioneering contributions, Dr. Fang has received several prestigious honors, including the Nano 50 Award from Nanotech Briefs Magazine (2006) and inclusion in the Scientific American 50 (2006) for his groundbreaking work on carbon nanotube sheets and yarns.

Publications

Creating Nanoknot‐Like Domains for Robust Artificial Spider Silk Toward High Twistocaloric Performance 2026 - Journal Article
D2O-Enhanced Twistron Yarn Harvesters for Low-Frequency Mechanical Energy Harvesting 2026 - Journal Article
Mandrel-free fabrication of giant spring-index and stroke muscles for diverse applications 2025 - Journal Article
Large stroke radially-oriented MXene composite fiber tensile artificial muscles 2025 - Journal Article
Water-induced strong isotropic MXene-bridged graphene sheets for electrochemical energy storage 2024 - Journal Article
Recent Advances in Carbon Nanotube-Based Energy Harvesting Technologies 2023 - Journal Article
Mechanical energy harvesters with tensile efficiency of 17.4% and torsional efficiency of 22.4% based on homochirally plied carbon nanotube yarns 2023 - Journal Article
More powerful twistron carbon nanotube yarn mechanical energy harvesters 2022 - Journal Article

Awards

R&D 100 Special Recognition Gold Award for Market Disruptor Product - [2015]
European Network on Artificial Muscles Award - [2012]
Time Magazine’s 50 Best Inventions of the Year - Time Magazine [2011]
Scientific American 50 - Scientific American [2006]
Nano 50 Award - Nanotech Briefs Magazine [2006]
NanoVic Prize - [2006]