Leslie Schoop

Leslie Mareike Schoop is a German-American materials chemist who is an associate professor at Princeton University.

[3] She completed her doctoral research at Princeton University, where she worked on exotic properties in condensed matter with Robert Cava.

[3] She was awarded a Minerva program fellowship and moved to the Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research to work alongside Bettina Lotsch,[6] where she found the first non-toxic air-stable topological semi-metal, ZrSiS.

[7] In 2017, Schoop established her own research group at Princeton, where she identified new topological semimetals and predicted their crystal properties.

[9] In confined electrons, twisted bilayer graphene are strongly correlated, forming one-dimensional linear arrays of conductive channels.