Daniel joined the Dehns Munich office in September 2024 after graduating from the University of Nottingham with a Masters degree in Physics. In his studies he specialised in areas including semiconductor physics and quantum optics. His final year dissertation was titled ‘Switching Mechanisms in Hybrid Polymer/Metal Nanoparticle based Memristors’, in which he investigated how charge trapping within defect states affected switching between high and low resistive states in memory devices with uses in Neuromorphic computing architectures.
Daniel works with clients of all sizes, from small SMEs to large multinationals in the US, UK and Germany.
Daniel has worked on a variety of cases that involved subject matter from medical devices to complex mechanical systems.