주요 콘텐츠로 건너뛰기

귀하의 브라우저가 완벽하게 지원되지 않습니다. 옵션이 있는 경우 최신 버전으로 업그레이드하거나 Mozilla Firefox, Microsoft Edge, Google Chrome 또는 Safari 14 이상을 사용하세요. 가능하지 않거나 지원이 필요한 경우 피드백을 보내주세요.

이 새로운 경험에 대한 귀하의 의견에 감사드립니다.의견을 말씀해 주세요

Elsevier
엘스비어와 함께 출판

Profile

Mireille Turmine

Mireille Turmine

Sorbonne Université, France

Dr. Mireille Turmine is an associate professor (HDR) at Sorbonne University in Paris, France, and a senior member of the Laboratoire de Réactivité de Surface (LRS, UMR 7197). She received her Ph.D. in applied chemistry and industrial process engineering from Université Pierre et Marie Curie in 1991, followed by her habilitation à diriger des recherches (HDR) in 2002. The primary focus of her research endeavours has been on the physicochemistry of dispersed media, surfactant-based systems, and solid-liquid interfacial wettability.

Dr. Turmine's research focuses on the physicochemistry of complex reaction media, including solvent mixtures, micellar systems, and ionic liquids. Her work has applications in electrochemistry, energy storage, corrosion, and electrodeposition. Dr. Turmine has made significant contributions to the thermodynamics of solutions and interfaces by developing new approaches to describe nanoscale and confined systems, such as nanobubbles and nanoparticles. Dr. Turmine's work combines fundamental thermodynamic analysis with the experimental characterization of transport properties, wettability, and interfacial reactivity.

Dr. Turmine plays an active role in institutional governance as a member of the scientific councils of the Laboratoire de Réactivité de Surface and the Faculty of Chemistry at Sorbonne Université. Dr. Turmine has co-organized several international conferences and symposia, notably within the International Society of Electrochemistry, including recent meetings in Lyon (2023) and Mainz (2025).

Over the past five years, Dr. Turmine has participated in numerous nationally and industrially funded research projects focusing on ionic-liquid-based energy storage, electrocatalyst recycling, corrosion science, and microfluidic electrochemistry.