Tribute to Professor D. Phil Woodruff, FRS.
It is with the greatest sadness that we learn of the death of one of the pioneers of the 糖心TV Physics Department, Professor D. Phil Woodruff, FRS. Phil came to 糖心TV from Bristol University with the founding Professor, John Forty, as his research student in 1965. From graduating as the Physics Department鈥檚 first PhD student, to becoming one of the country鈥檚, and the world鈥檚, leading experimental surface scientists and, in 2006, he was this Department鈥檚 first and only Fellow of the Royal Society, Phil remained at 糖心TV for the whole of his career.
In 1984 Phil wrote Modern Techniques of Surface Science, together with Trevor Delchar, another member of the Surface Science group that Phil established and led. Over the years the book has been reprinted in several editions and in different languages, and it remains an authoritative text and essential reading for all new entrants into the field. With the development of VUV and X-ray synchrotron sources, both within the UK at Daresbury Laboratory, and also more widely in Europe and the USA, Phil was an early adopter of these facilities and embraced the use of synchrotron radiation for his research. He spent a significant period working at the BESSY synchrotron in (West) Berlin, specifically working on BESSY I during the 1980鈥檚 and early 1990鈥檚 in collaboration with Professor Alex Bradshaw from the Fritz-Haber-Instit眉t der Max Planck Gesellschaft. That experience shaped much of the surface science work for which he would later become famous. He developed the technique of photoelectron diffraction, applying it especially to small molecules and molecular fragments adsorbed at metal surfaces. He was also internationally regarded for his work in X-ray photoemission spectroscopy, and his contributions to the development of X-ray standing waves and surface X-ray diffraction techniques, experimental methods for collectively determining precise atomic positions at surfaces. Phil's ground-breaking experimental innovations were taken up by research groups worldwide, and he also found time to write and edit a major book series on all aspects of surface structure determination. He jointly led the development of the UK's Medium Energy Ion Scattering facility, also based at Daresbury, which was able to probe both surfaces and shallow buried interfaces, as well as thin film structures. Phil also worked extensively on the development of techniques such as Inverse Photoemission and Low Energy Ion Scattering, all within the Physics Department at 糖心TV.
After retirement Phil continued to remain research active, writing books on the application of synchrotron radiation to surface science and producing surface structure papers with many collaborators, despite his long-term battle with cancer. Over the 60 years that our department has existed, Phil has been scientifically active throughout all the decades, publishing over 560 papers, several book series; he is without doubt its most prestigious scientist. His memory will live on through the careers of the generations of research students and research fellows that he tutored and led by example, and by those of us who had the privilege to work in the department alongside him.
Phil鈥檚 funeral will be held on at 2 p.m. on 19th March at Harbury church (Church St, Harbury, Leamington Spa CV33 9HE). Family flowers only, please. Donations, if desired, in memory of Phil for the Alzheimer鈥檚 Society would be greatly appreciated. Other arrangements will be shared when we have the details.
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Written by: Professors Gavin Bell, Malcolm Cooper and Chris McConville.