Warren E. Pickett


Distinguished Professor
Department of Physics
University of California Davis
One Shields Avenue
Davis CA 95616
Tel: (530)220-2138
Fax: (530)752-4717
email:wepickett@ucdavis.edu

Education

PhD 1975 Stony Brook University
MS 1971 Wichita State Univeristy
BS 1969 Wichita State University

Biographical Sketch

Warren Pickett obtained his B.S. (Physics, Math) and M.S. (Physics) degrees at Wichita State University before going to Stony Brook University, New York to complete his PhD in theoretical condensed matter physics in 1975. He had postdoctoral research appointments at the University of Bristol, U.K., at UC Berkeley, and at Northwestern University, where his research centered on the electronic structure of crystalline metals and semiconductors, on semiconductor interfaces, and on superconductivity. In 1979 he accepted a research scientist position at the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington DC. Early in his years at NRL, Warren increased his activity in large scale calculations of the properties of condensed phases, using the NRL ASC supercomputer and early Cray machines (Boeing) to carry out a study of, for example, the complex-structured heavy fermion superconductor UBe13.

He was elected Fellow of the American Physical Society in 1989, and shared 2nd Prize in the IBM Supercomputing Competition in 1990. At NRL Pickett was awarded the E. O. Hulburt Award in 1990 and the Sigma Xi Technical Achievement Award in Pure Science in 1993. He was appointed Senior Scientist at NRL in 1992. He received Alan Berman Research Publication Awards at NRL in 1983, 1998,1989, and 1992. In 1997 Warren took a professorship in physics at UC Davis, where he is a participant in an interdisciplinary program on nanophase research as well as working in condensed matter physics research programs. In 2003 he was named Distinguished Professor of Physics. In 2012 he enjoyed a Simons Foundation Prefessorship while on sabbatical in Singapore and Europe. He was elected to Fellowship to the Institute of Physics (U.K.) in 2014, and to the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2017.

Warren Pickett has had visiting professor positions at Daresbury Laboratory (U.K.), Cambridge University, National University of Singapore, and Baptist University of Hong Kong. During his Humboldt Professorship in 2005-6 he enjoyed visiting professor positions at the Max Planck Institute, Stuttgart, and the Leibniz Institute for Solid State Research (IFW), Dresden. In 2013 he was appointed Adjunct Professor at SungKyunKwan University (SKKU), South Korea. After a two-week visit to Iran in 2014, he was appointed Adjunct Professor at the Sharif University of Technology, Tehran.

Warren Pickett served on the editorial board of the Journal of Superconductivity several years after its foundation in 1989, and on the editorial board of Chemical Design Automation News from 1993-1998. He was a member of the Council of the American Physical Society from 1996-1999. From 2001-2005 he served as Editor of the Journal of the Physics and Chemistry of Solids, published by Elsevier Press.

Warren Pickett served as Chair of the Physics Department 2008-2011. During much of this same time he served four years 2008-2012 as Vice Chair, Chair-Elect, Chair, and Past Chair of the Division of Condensed Matter Physics of the American Physical Society.

Warren Pickett's research focusses on pursuing a first principles (purely theoretical) description of the properties of complex crystalline materials, and he enjoys collaborations with solid state chemists and materials scientists as well as solid state theorists and experimentalists. His interest includes magnets and superconductors and magnetic materials that become superconducting; ferroelectric insulators that become ferromagnetic; materials with topological electronic states; nanoscale-structured materials such as metal-oxide interfaces and heterostructures. He has engaged in computational materials design since the early 1980s. Recent research activities include topological materials, nickelate superconductors, and metal hydrides that become (near) room temperature superconductors at high pressure. Warren has 500+ publications in the primary scientific literature, and has had collaborations with scientists in Europe (several countries), Asia (Japan, S. Korea, China, Iran), South America (Argentina), and across the USA.