Faculty of Science and Engineering, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK.
Interests:
Electrochemistry; Additive manufacturing; Screen-printed; Sensors; Batteries; Supercapacitors
Website:
Bio:

Craig E. Banks is a world leading electrochemist (papers>600; h-index: 96; citations: 42K), also 4 books, 20 book chapters and is the lead inventor on 21 patents. Craig was awarded the Royal Society of Chemistry's Harrison–Meldola Memorial Prize (2011) for his contributions to the understanding of carbon materials, in particular graphene and its application as an electrode material, was awarded a Royal Society of Chemistry Tilden Prize (2023) Winner, awarded for outstanding contributions to electrochemistry through pioneering additive manufacturing and also the Royal Society of Chemistry L. S. Theobald Lectureship (2024) who has demonstrated a significant contribution to the development or application of analytical chemistry. CB is known for both his fundamental and applied aspects of electrochemistry, with the significant development of next generation screen-printing electrodes and more recently the use of additive manufacturing.

Website:
Bio:

Craig E. Banks is a world leading electrochemist (papers>600; h-index: 96; citations: 42K), also 4 books, 20 book chapters and is the lead inventor on 21 patents. Craig was awarded the Royal Society of Chemistry's Harrison–Meldola Memorial Prize (2011) for his contributions to the understanding of carbon materials, in particular graphene and its application as an electrode material, was awarded a Royal Society of Chemistry Tilden Prize (2023) Winner, awarded for outstanding contributions to electrochemistry through pioneering additive manufacturing and also the Royal Society of Chemistry L. S. Theobald Lectureship (2024) who has demonstrated a significant contribution to the development or application of analytical chemistry. CB is known for both his fundamental and applied aspects of electrochemistry, with the significant development of next generation screen-printing electrodes and more recently the use of additive manufacturing.