- Jan Hendrik Schön
Jan Hendrik Schön (born 1970) is a German
physicist who briefly rose to prominence after a series of apparent breakthroughs that were later discovered to be fraudulent. [Deutsche Welle] Before he was exposed, Schön had received theOtto-Klung-Weberbank Prize for Physics in 2001, the Braunschweig Prize in 2001 and theOutstanding Young Investigator Award of theMaterials Research Society in 2002.The Schön scandal provoked discussion in the scientific community about the degree of responsibility of coauthors and reviewers of
scientific paper s. The debate centered on whetherpeer review traditionally designed to find errors and determine relevance and originality of papers, should also be required to detect deliberate fraud.Rise to prominence
Schön's field of research was
condensed matter physics andnanotechnology .Agin, p 37] He received his Ph.D. from theUniversity of Konstanz in 1997. In late 1997 he was hired byBell Labs .In 2001 he was listed as an author on an average of one research paper every eight days. In that year he announced in "Nature" that he had produced a
transistor on the molecular scale. Schön claimed to have used a thin layer of organic dyemolecule s to assemble anelectric circuit that, when acted on by anelectric current , behaved as a transistor. The implications of his work were significant. It would have been the beginning of a move away fromsilicon -basedelectronics and towards organic electronics. It would have allowed chips to continue shrinking past the point at which silicon breaks down, and therefore continueMoore's Law for much longer than is currently predicted. It also would have drastically reduced the cost of electronics.Allegations and investigation
As recounted by Dan Agin in his book "Junk Science" [Agin book] , soon after Schön published his work on single-molecule semiconductors, others in the physics community alleged that his data contained anomalies. Professor Lydia Sohn, then of
Princeton University , noticed that two experiments carried out at very differenttemperature s had identical noise. When the editors of "Nature" pointed this out to Schön, he claimed to have accidentally submitted the same graph twice. ProfessorPaul McEuen ofCornell University then found the same noise in a paper describing a third experiment. More research by McEuen, Sohn and other physicists, uncovered a number of examples of duplicate data in Schön's work. This triggered a series of reactions that quickly led Lucent Technologies (which ran Bell Labs) to start a formal investigation.Cassuto]In May 2002 Bell Labs set up a committee to investigate this affair, with Professor
Malcolm Beasley ofStanford University as chair.Beasley Report] The committee obtained information from all of Schön's coauthors, and interviewed the three principal ones (Zhenan Bao, Bertram Batlogg and Christian Kloc). It examined electronic drafts of the disputed papers which included processed numeric data. The committee requested copies of the raw data but found that Schön had kept no laboratory notebooks. His raw-data files had been erased from his computer. According to Schön the files were erased because his computer had limited hard drive space. In addition, all of his experimental samples had been discarded, or damaged beyond repair.Beasley Report, Executive Summary]On
September 25 ,2002 , the committee publicly released its report. The report contained details of 24 allegations of misconduct. They found evidence of Schön's scientific misconduct in at least 16 of them. They found that whole data sets had been reused in a number of different experiments. They also found that some of his graphs, which purportedly had been plotted from experimental data, had instead been produced using mathematical functions.The report found that all of the misdeeds had been performed by Schön alone. All the coauthors were completely exonerated of scientific misconduct. It was, however, unclear whether all of them had exercised sufficient professional responsibility in trusting the integrity of his data.
Bell Labs fired Schön on the day they received the report. It was the first known case of fraud in the Lab's history.
Aftermath and sanctions
Schön acknowledged that the data were incorrect in many of these papers. [ Beasley Report, Appendix H] He claimed that the substitutions could have occurred by honest mistake. He admitted to having falsified some data and stated he did so to show more convincing evidence for behaviour that he observed.
Experimenters at
Delft University of Technology and theThomas J. Watson Research Center have since performed experiments similar to Schön's. They did not obtain similar results. [Agin, p 38] Also, before the allegations became public, several research groups tried to reproduce most of the groundbreaking results in the field of the physics of organic molecular materials without success.In June 2004 the
University of Konstanz issued a press release stating that Schön's doctoral degree had been revoked due to "dishonourable conduct". Department of Physics spokesman Wolfgang Dieterich called the affair the "biggest fraud in physics in the last 50 years" and said that the "credibility of science had been brought into disrepute". [Konstanz press release]In October 2004, the
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, the German Research Foundation) Joint Committee announced sanctions against him. The former DFG post-doctorate fellow was deprived of his active right to vote in DFG elections or serve on DFG committees for an eight-year period. During that period, Schön will also be unable to serve as a peer reviewer or apply for DFG funds. [DFG press release]Withdrawn journal papers
On
October 31 ,2002 , "Science" withdrew eight papers written by Schön: ["Science" retraction]
* J. H. Schön, S. Berg, Ch. Kloc, B. Batlogg, Ambipolarpentacene field-effect transistors and inverters, Science 287, 1022 (2000)
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc, R. C. Haddon, B. Batlogg, A superconducting field-effect switch, Science 288, 656 (2000)
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc, B. Batlogg,Fractional quantum Hall effect in organic molecular semiconductors, Science 288, 2338 (2000)
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc, A. Dodabala-pur, B. Batlogg, An organic solid state injection laser, Science 289, 599 (2000)
* J. H. Schön, A. Dodabalapur, Ch. Kloc, B. Batlogg, A light-emitting field-effect transistor, Science 290, 963 (2000)
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc, H. Y. Hwang, B. Batlogg,Josephson junction s with tunable weak links, Science 292, 252 (2001)
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc, B. Batlogg,High-temperature superconductivity in lattice-expanded C60, Science 293, 2432 (2001)
* J. H. Schön, H. Meng, Z. Bao, Field-effect modulation of the conductance of single molecules, Science 294, 2138 (2001)On
December 20 ,2002 , the "Physical Review journals" withdrew six papers written by Schön: [Phys. Rev. B. retraction]
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc, R. A. Laudise, and B. Batlogg, Electrical properties of single crystals of rigid rodlike conjugated molecules, Phys. Rev. B 58, 12952-12957 (1998)
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc, and B. Batlogg, Hole transport in pentacene single crystals, Phys. Rev. B 63, 245201 (2001)
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc, D. Fichou, and B. Batlogg, Conjugation length dependence of the charge transport in oligothiophene single crystals, Phys. Rev. B 64, 035209 (2001)
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc, and B. Batlogg, Mobile iodine dopants in organic semiconductors, Phys. Rev. B 61, 10803-10806
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc, and B. Batlogg, Low-temperature transport in high-mobility polycrystalline pentacene field-effect transistors, Phys. Rev. B 63, 125304 (2001)
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc, and B. Batlogg, Universal Crossover from Band to Hopping Conduction in Molecular Organic, Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 3843-3846 (2001)On
March 5 ,2003 , "Nature" withdrew seven papers written by Schön: ["Nature" retraction]
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc, E. Bucher and B. Batlogg. Efficient organic photovoltaic diodes based on doped pentacene. Nature 403, 408-410 (1999).
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc and B. Batlogg. Superconductivity in molecular crystals induced by charge injection. Nature 406, 702-704 (2000).
* J. H. Schön, Ch. Kloc and B. Batlogg. Superconductivity at 52 K in hole-doped C60. Nature 408, 549-552 (2000).
* J. H. Schön, A. Dodabalapur, Z. Bao, C. Kloc, O. Schenker and B. Batlogg. Gate-induced superconductivity in a solution-processed organic polymer film. Nature 410, 189-192 (2001).
* J. H. Schön, H. Meng and Z. Bao. Self-assembled monolayer organic field-effect transistors. Nature 413, 713-716 (2001).
* J. H. Schön, C. Kloc, T. Siegrist, M. Steigerwald, C. Svensson and B. Batlogg. Superconductivity in single crystals of the fullerene C70. Nature 413, 831-833 (2001).
* J. H. Schön, M. Dorget, F. C. Beuran, X. Z. Zu, E. Arushanov, C. D. Cavellin and M. Lagues. Superconductivity in CaCuO2 as a result of field-effect doping. Nature 414, 434-436 (2001).ee also
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Academic fraud
*Academic scandal
*Scientific misconduct
*Problematic physics experiments Notes
References
*cite web
publisher = Bell Labs
last = Beasley
first = Malcolm R.
coauthors = Supriyo Datta, Herwig Kogelnik, Herbert Kroemer
month = September | year = 2002
title = Report of the Investigation Committee on the possibility of Scientific Misconduct in the work of Hendrik Schon and Coauthors
format =pdf
url = http://www.alcatel-lucent.com/wps/DocumentStreamerServlet?LMSG_CABINET=Docs_and_Resource_Ctr&LMSG_CONTENT_FILE=Corp_Governance_Docs/researchreview.pdf*cite web
publisher = Salon.com
last =Cassuto
first =Leonard
title = Big trouble in the world of "Big Physics"
date = 16 September 2002
url = http://dir.salon.com/story/tech/feature/2002/09/16/physics/index.html#*cite web
publisher = Bell Labs
last = Beasley
first = Malcolm R.
coauthors = Supriyo Datta, Herwig Kogelnik, Herbert Kroemer
month = September | year = 2002
title = Report of the Investigation Committee on the possibility of Scientific Misconduct in the work of Hendrik Schon and Coauthors
format =pdf
url = http://www.alcatel-lucent.com/wps/DocumentStreamerServlet?LMSG_CABINET=Docs_and_Resource_Ctr&LMSG_CONTENT_FILE=Corp_Governance_Docs/researchreview.pdf*cite book
last=Agin
first=Dan
title=Junk Science: An Overdue Indictment of Government, Industry, and Faith Groups That Twist Science for Their Own Gain
year=2007
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=VxcjOL1j8iAC
publisher=Macmillan
isbn=9780312374808*cite news
publisher =Deutsche Welle
title = Scandal Rocks Scientific Community
date = 30 September 2002
url = http://www.deutsche-welle.de/dw/article/0,2144,646321,00.html*cite journal
last = Bao
first = Z.
coauthors = B. Batlogg, S. Berg, A. Dodabalapur, R. C. Haddon, H. Hwang, C. Kloc, H. Meng and J. H. Schön
title = Retraction
year = 2002
journal = Science
volume = 298
issue = 5595
pages = 961b-
doi = 10.1126/science.298.5595.961b*cite journal
last = Schön
first = J. H.
coauthors = Ch. Kloc, B. Batlogg
year = 2002
journal = Phys. Rev. B.
title = Retraction: Hole transport in pentacene single crystals [Phys. Rev. B 63, 245201 (2001)]
volume = 66
pages = 249903
url = http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PRB/v66/i24/e249903*cite press release
url = http://www.dfg.de/aktuelles_presse/reden_stellungnahmen/2004/download/ha_jhschoen_1004_en.pdf
year = 2004
publisher =Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
title = DFG Imposes Sanctions Against Jan Hendrik Schön
format=PDF*cite journal
last = Schön
first = J. H.
coauthors = C. Kloc, E. Bucher and B. Batlogg
title = Retraction: Efficient organic photovoltaic diodes based on doped pentacene
year = 2003
journal = Nature
volume = 422
issue = 6927
pages = 93
doi = 10.1038/nature01468External links
*
*
* [http://www.aip.org/pt/vol-55/iss-11/p15.html Investigation Finds that One Lucent Physicist Engaged in Scientific Misconduct] "Physics Today", 2002
* [http://www.npr.org/ramfiles/totn/20021018.totn.01.ram NPR Science Friday report (10/18/2002)]
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