Werner H. Bloss

Werner H. Bloss
Born 1930
Winterbach, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Citizenship Germany
Nationality German
Fields Condensed Matter Physics
Institutions Institute of Physical Electronics
Alma mater University of Tübingen, University of Stuttgart
Notable students Hans Werner Scock, Gerhard Billger, Gotfried Bauer, Peter Schwartzman, F. Pfisterer, Thomas Walter, Wahid Shams-Kolahi, Volker Nadenau, Rainer Herberholz
Notable awards Solar Award of the German Section of ISES, Becquerel Prize of the Commission of the European Communities,[1] 1st Class Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany (1990)

Werner H. Bloss (1930 – June 6, 1995) was a scientist known for his work in the field of photovoltaics. He was the director of the Institute of Physical Electronics at the University of Stuttgart.

Biography

Werner H. Bloss studied Physics at the University of Tübingen and the University of Stuttgart. In 1955 he took the position of a research assistant at the Institute of Gas Discharge Techniques and Photoelectronics at the University of Stuttgart. Here he came into contact with various methods of energy conversion. In his doctoral thesis he described the noble gas filled thermionic converter developed by him. In the early sixties, very successful research work on various types of thermionic converters was performed under his guidance at the above-mentioned institute.[2]

In the autumn of 1967 he took a position as Associate Professor at the University of Gainesville, Florida. During his two-year stay in the United States his field of interest widened again to take in optical methods of image processing. After returning from the US he implemented this novel field of research at the institute in Stuttgart.

On October 1, 1970, Dr. Bloss became the director of his institute at the University of Stuttgart. He renamed it "Institute of Physical Electronics" (IPE). Professor Bloss focused the research on three main fields:

  1. Image processing: analog optical as well as digital image processing
  2. Photovoltaics, especially development of thin film solar cells
  3. Applied plasma research, in particular in the field of ignition and combustion processes

Books and publications

This is a short version of the most important books and publications that Professor Bloss authored or co-authored:

Books

Scientific publications

References

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