Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society
The Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society is a science research institute located at the heart of the academic district of Dahlem, in Berlin, Germany.
The original Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry, founded in 1911, was incorporated into the Max Planck Society and simultaneously renamed for its first director, Fritz Haber, in 1953.
The research topics covered throughout the history of the institute include chemical kinetics and reaction dynamics, colloid chemistry, atomic physics, spectroscopy, surface chemistry and surface physics, chemical physics and molecular physics, theoretical chemistry, and materials science.
During World War I and World War II, the research of the institute was directed towards Germany's military needs.
To the illustrious past members of the Institute belong Herbert Freundlich, James Franck, Paul Friedlander, Rudolf Ladenburg, Michael Polanyi, Eugene Wigner, Ladislaus Farkas, Hartmut Kallmann, Otto Hahn, Robert Havemann, Karl Friedrich Bonhoeffer, Iwan N. Stranski, Ernst Ruska, Max von Laue, Gerhard Borrmann, Rudolf Brill, Kurt Moliere, Jochen Block, Heinz Gerischer,, Kurt Ueberreiter, Alexander Bradshaw, Elmar Zeitler, and Gerhard Ertl.
Nobel Prize laureates affiliated with the institute include Max von Laue, Fritz Haber, James Franck, Otto Hahn, Eugene Wigner, Ernst Ruska, Gerhard Ertl.Structure
There are five departments with a number of research groups within:
- Inorganic Chemistry
- *Reactivity
- *Electronic Structure
- *Liquid/vapor Interfaces
- *Electron Microscopy
- Interface Science
- *Liquid Phase Electron Microscopy
- *Scanning Probe Microscopy
- *Photo-Electrochemical Scanning Probe Microscopy
- *Thin Films
- *Structure and Reactivity
- *Spectro-Microscopy
- *Operando Hard X-ray Spectroscopy
- Molecular Physics
- *Controlled Molecules
- *Spectroscopy and chemistry of metal clusters and cluster complexes
- *Interactions of molecules with fields
- *Infrared excitation of gas-phase molecules and clusters
- *Cold and ultracold molecules
- *Liquid microjets
- Physical Chemistry
- *Nanoscale Surface Chemistry
- *Ultrafast Scanning Probe Microscopy
- *Lattice Dynamics
- *Nonlinear Spectro-Electrochemistry
- *Nonlinear Interfacial Spectroscopy Group
- *Structural & Electronic Surface Dynamics
- *Terahertz Physics
- *Electron Dynamiχ
- Theory
- *Unifying Concepts in Catalysis
- *Heat and Charge Transport
- *Ab Initio Biomolecular Simulations
- *Simulations from Ab Initio Approaches: Structure and Dynamics from Quantum Mechanics
- *Big-Data Analytics for Materials Science
- *Crystal-Structure Prediction and Heterogeneous Catalysis
- *Max Planck Fellow Group
- *Max Planck Partner Group for Advanced Electronic-Structure Methods