Fenglong Gu Professors, Doctoral Supervisors, and Pearl River Scholars

  center director

Research field:

1. Using vector potential method to solve the problem of dipole operator breaking periodic boundaries. 2 Design of Nonlinear Optical Materials 3 Improvement and Promotion of Elongation Method

 


Personal Profile:

Gu Fenglong, professor, doctoral supervisor. Professor Gu Fenglong, together with Kirtman from the University of California, USA and Bishop from the University of Ottawa, Canada, established a theoretical method that fundamentally solves the problem of dipole operator breaking periodic boundary conditions that has plagued the theoretical chemistry and physics community for decades. They also independently developed a program to calculate the nonlinear optical properties of one-dimensional polymers, solving the technical problem of calculating the derivative of k-vector spatial wave functions. This method has been recognized by peers and has been included as a standard program for calculating the nonlinear optical properties of crystals in CRYSTAL's commercial program; Professor Gu Fenglong has also made significant progress in the design of nonlinear optical materials, recently proposing a new design approach that has positive guiding significance for both theoretical and experimental research in nonlinear optics. We have also conducted in-depth research on the theoretical methods and program development of macromolecular systems, making important contributions to the improvement, development, promotion, and application of growth methods for calculating macromolecular systems. Especially the proposed new method for constructing localized molecular orbitals is an important theoretical and technological breakthrough in the growth method.

 


Work experience:

September 1995- July 1997: Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute of Physics and Chemistry, University of Erlangen, Germany (collaborating supervisor: Professor J. Ladik)

October 1997 September 2001: Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Chemistry, University of Ottawa, Canada (collaborating supervisor: Professor D. M. Bishop)

October 2001 August 2002: Special Researcher at the Department of Chemistry, Hiroshima University/Japan Association for the Promotion of Science (collaborating supervisor: Professor Yuriko Aoki)

September 2002 February 2003: Research Assistant, Department of Chemistry, University of Ottawa, Canada

March 2003 September 2005: Worked successively at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, Hiroshima University, and Kyushu University

From October 2005 to June 2009, he served as a specially appointed associate professor at the Institute of Integrated Science and Technology and the Center for Basic Research and Development of Intelligence at Kyushu University in Japan

May 2009 present: Distinguished Professor at the School of Chemistry and Environment, South China Normal University

 


Educational background:

September 1985 July 1989: Undergraduate student majoring in Physical Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, Jilin University

September 1989- July 1992: Master's student in Physical Chemistry at the Institute of Physics and Chemistry, Jilin University (supervised by Professor Tang Aoqing)

September 1992- July 1995: PhD student in Physical Chemistry at the Institute of Physics and Chemistry, Jilin University (supervised by Professor Tang Aoqing)