Education
Huang obtained a BSc and MSc from the Department of Physics at Soochow University, China, in 1998 and 2000, respectively. He earned his PhD from the Department of Physics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, China, in 2003.Career
Huang was a postdoctoral researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Germany, from 2003 to 2004. He then held the position of a Humboldt Research Fellow at the same institute from 2004 to 2005. In 2005, he assumed the role of a professor in the Department of Physics at Fudan University, China.Research
His research area encompasses thermodynamics, statistical physics, and complex systems, with a particular emphasis on transformation thermotics and its extended theories, thermal metamaterials and their engineering applications, diffusionics, diffusion metamaterials, and diffusion control.Thermal cloak, thermal metamaterials, and diffusion metamaterials
In 2008, Huang introduced the concept of a thermal cloak. During that period, he formulated the steady-state transformation thermotics theory, drawing inspiration from the transformation optics theory. He introduced the novel idea of a thermal cloak, drawing parallels with optical and electromagnetic cloaks. The term "thermal cloak" refers to a protective shell enveloping an object, enabling the unobstructed passage of heat while preserving the temperature and heat flow patterns in the surrounding background. Subsequently, the concept of the thermal cloak underwent significant extensions. First, it evolved from the thermal cloak to thermal metamaterials. Second, it further advanced from thermal metamaterials to diffusion metamaterials. The description of diffusion metamaterials employs transformation theory and extended theories, a field referred to as diffusionics. According to the categorization of governing equations, diffusion metamaterials constitute the third branch of metamaterials to emerge, setting themselves apart from the two previously established branches: electromagnetic/optical (transverse) wave metamaterials pioneered by Sir John Brian Pendry, and other (longitudinal/transverse) wave metamaterials pioneered by Ping Sheng. Currently, these three branches represent the comprehensive framework of the thriving field ofReferences
{{reflist Living people 1977 births Theoretical physicists Chinese physicists Soochow University (Suzhou) alumni Metamaterials scientists