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Ranked #1,697worldwide#1,615 in Australia
5 Star3
4 Star2
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1 Star0
5.08/20/2025

Always fair, encouraging, and motivating.

4.05/21/2025

Encourages students to think outside the box.

5.03/31/2025

Always fair, constructive, and supportive.

4.02/27/2025

Challenges students to grow and excel.

5.02/4/2025

Great Professor!

About Warwick

Dr. Warwick Belcher is a Research Associate at the Centre for Organic Electronics (COE) within the University of Newcastle, Australia, where he handles funding and collaboration inquiries and serves as Visits and Talks Coordinator. He earned his PhD in Chemistry from the University of Auckland in 1997. Following his doctoral studies, Belcher was appointed Assistant Director of the Nanomaterials Research Centre. At the University of Newcastle, he contributes to the Renewables research theme as Deputy Director and Theme Leader, working in the Physics Building on the Callaghan campus as part of the School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences in the College of Engineering, Science and Environment. His career focuses on translating synthetic chemistry into practical applications for organic electronics.

Belcher's academic interests encompass synthetic chemistry, organic photovoltaics, conjugated polymers, fullerene blends, anion binding, porphyrin complexes, and sensors. He has made significant contributions to understanding blend morphology and device performance in organic solar cells, including nanoparticulate formulations and solar paint technologies. Key publications include 'A quantitative study of PCBM diffusion during annealing of P3HT:PCBM blend films' (Macromolecules, 2009), 'Organic solar cells: understanding the role of Förster resonance energy transfer' (International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 2012), 'Vertical stratification and interfacial structure in P3HT:PCBM organic solar cells' (Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 2010), 'Nanoscale quantitative chemical mapping of conjugated polymer blends' (Nano Letters, 2006), 'A projection of commercial-scale organic photovoltaic module costs' (Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells, 2014), and the review 'Solar Paint: From Synthesis to Printing' (Polymers, 2014). Belcher has co-authored numerous papers demonstrating the impact of his work on low-cost, printable renewable energy solutions and has collaborated extensively with Professor Paul Dastoor and the COE team on upscaling organic photovoltaic manufacturing.