Nobel-winning materials scientist Omar Yaghi joins China’s Tsinghua University from the US

Omar Yaghi, the winner of last year’s Nobel Prize for chemistry, has left the United States to lead a new AI-driven research centre at China’s Tsinghua University. The 61-year-old materials scientist will head a team working on ways artificial intelligence (AI) can transform the design and synthesis

South China Morning Post
75
2 min read
0 views
Nobel-winning materials scientist Omar Yaghi joins China’s Tsinghua University from the US

Omar Yaghi, the winner of last year’s Nobel Prize for chemistry, has left the United States to lead a new AI-driven research centre at China’s Tsinghua University.

The 61-year-old materials scientist will head a team working on ways artificial intelligence (AI) can transform the design and synthesis of new materials and shorten their development cycle “by orders of magnitude”, Tsinghua said on Friday.

Speaking at his appointment ceremony, Yaghi said he hoped to develop materials to tackle major environmental challenges such as water shortages, carbon neutrality and sustainable development.

He added that he also wanted to help train young scientists in AI-driven chemistry.

Yaghi was previously the James and Neeltje Tretter professor of chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley. He shared the 2025 Nobel Prize with Richard Robson and Susumu Kitagawa for their work on metal-organic frameworks, which are ultra-porous, spongelike materials created by linking metal ions with carbon-based molecules.

These and other related materials have the highest surface areas known to date, allowing them to capture and convert carbon, harvest water from desert air and absorb hydrogen to produce clean energy.

Zhou Zihui, a postdoctoral researcher at UC Berkeley, said Yaghi had trained about 200 researchers, nearly half of whom were Chinese.

Share this article

Related Articles

‘China shock 3.0’ is coming. And it’ll be AI-powered robots
🇨🇳🇹🇼China vs Taiwan
South China Morning Post

‘China shock 3.0’ is coming. And it’ll be AI-powered robots

The world’s attention is fixed on frontier artificial intelligence (AI) models, but China’s robot-making factories deserve just as much attention. Chinese e-commerce company JD.com has predicted that robots would ultimately replace its 700,000 delivery workers, while workers at South Korean carmaker

大约 2 小时前2 min
Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi calls on Sweden to help rebuild trust
🇨🇳🇹🇼China vs Taiwan
South China Morning Post

Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi calls on Sweden to help rebuild trust

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi has urged Sweden to help rebuild trust between the two countries and cultivate a “correct perception” of each other, despite their frictions in recent years. “Sweden was the first Western country that established diplomatic relations with China, which showed Sweden’s

大约 4 小时前1 min
Energy transition scientist Chen Peipei leaves Cambridge to build her own lab in Hong Kong
🇨🇳🇹🇼China vs Taiwan
South China Morning Post

Energy transition scientist Chen Peipei leaves Cambridge to build her own lab in Hong Kong

For some early-career scientists, the prestige of British academia is being marred by shrinking research funding and a complex geopolitical climate, prompting top-tier talent to look elsewhere for stability and resources. Chen Peipei, who moved from a research associate role at the University of Cam

大约 7 小时前2 min
How to manage China’s rise as a civilisational power
🇨🇳🇹🇼China vs Taiwan
South China Morning Post

How to manage China’s rise as a civilisational power

The world has yet to truly understand how to deal with a rapidly rising China. Even within China, some of the most learned minds are surprised at how quickly the country has taken the global lead in new economic areas, such as electric vehicles. Global warming is no longer abstract; ask around in Eu

大约 9 小时前3 min