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Prof. Ryan Hayes joins the ChAMP program

February 12, 2023 by calebjy1

Fall 2022

Ryan Hayes is an Assistant Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering.

Protein engineering and design has exciting applications in biocatalysis, therapeutics, and nanotechnology. While there are many experimental and computational approaches to protein engineering and design, computational approaches typically suffer from low accuracy. This makes them dependent on high throughput experimental validation and optimization. Therefore, research in the Hayes group focuses on improving the accuracy of computational protein design to enable more efficient use of experimental resources (https://faculty.sites.uci.edu/rhayes1/)

Filed Under: Uncategorized

ChAMP BBQ

July 18, 2022 by Albert Siryaporn

ChAMP BBQ

The new ChAMP class was welcomed at our annual summer BBQ on July 15th. Welcome students!

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Prof. Kai He joins the ChAMP program

June 11, 2022 by Beverly Wu

Prof. Kai He joins the ChAMP program

Spring 2022

Assistant Professor of Materials Science of Engineering

Our research goal is to leverage the advanced electron microscopy tools to understand fundamental materials behavior at the atomic level and engineer novel materials with improved properties for real-world applications in nanoscience and nanotechnology, quantum information sciences, and clean energy technologies.

 

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2022 summer program

June 2, 2022 by Albert Siryaporn

The 2022 summer program will run from 7/1-9/9 and will include in-person courses, training, research rotations, and activities. Stay tuned for details!

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Alexander Vasquez receives 2022 NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

June 2, 2022 by Albert Siryaporn

Alexander Vasquez receives 2022 NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

Alex has been awarded the highly competitive NSF Graduate Research Fellowship to study “Emergent Electronic Behavior in Epitaxially-Fused Nanocrystal Superlattices”. He will combine recent breakthroughs in quantum dot film fabrication to create high-performance, stable quantum dot nanocomposites with high energetic order. Quantum dots enable the research of self-assembling materials with unique optoelectronic properties, capable of improving the efficiency of solar cell devices for both space sciences and green energy.

Alex is a first-year graduate student in the Physics PhD program with a concentration in ChAMP (Chemical, Applied, and Materials Physics). Alex has had a strong interest in everything related to physics and astrophysics for as long as he can remember. Alex is an advocate for Neurodiversity in STEM fields. His work as an undergraduate helped inspire the NASA Neurodiversity Network (N3). N3 is a program that provides neurodiverse students, with strong interests and talents in STEM, opportunities for research and mentorship.

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Prof. Maxim Shcherbakov joins the ChAMP program

February 25, 2022 by Beverly Wu

Prof. Maxim Shcherbakov joins the ChAMP program

Winter 2022

Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

In his research, Maxim Shcherbakov merges fundamental physics concepts and cutting-edge nanotechnology to innovate in the area of photonic devices. Designer nanomaterials offer unprecedented flexibility to manipulate light waves on demand. His group uses a plethora of theoretical and experimental methods to conceive next-generation light-based components to find use in imagers, AR/VR technology, telecommunications and quantum computing.

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Prof. Fangyuan Ding joins the ChAMP program

January 25, 2022 by Albert Siryaporn

Prof. Fangyuan Ding joins the ChAMP program

Winter 2022

Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering
Quantitative single molecule biology and engineering, systems biology, nucleic-acid based therapies, single cell research tool developments

Filed Under: Uncategorized

ChAMP celebrates the holidays with a BBQ

December 9, 2021 by Albert Siryaporn

ChAMP celebrates the holidays with a BBQ

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Prof. SungWoo Nam joins the ChAMP program

August 13, 2021 by Beverly Wu

Prof. SungWoo Nam joins the ChAMP program

Summer 2021

SungWoo Nam is an Associate Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering.

Many mechanical deformations, such as buckling, crumpling, wrinkling, collapsing, and delamination, are usually considered as threats to mechanical integrity and are avoided or reduced in the traditional design of materials and structures. Our research goes against these conventions by tailoring such mechanical instabilities to create new functional morphologies. We use ultralow bending stiffness and semiconducting properties of atomically-thin materials to enable emerging mechanically-coupled properties (e.g., quantum emission, exciton localization/condensation, tunable plasmonics, flexoelectricity, etc.) and device-level multi-functionalities that extend beyond those of bulk material systems.

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ChAMP 2021 Summer Program

April 24, 2021 by Beverly Wu

Welcome to our 2021 ChAMP incoming class! The summer ChAMP program will run from July to mid-September and will include courses, workshops, and research rotations. Orientation on July 2nd. Stay tuned!

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Prof. Qi Song joins the ChAMP Program

Spring 2025

Qi Song is an Assistant Professor of Materials Science and Engineering

Song’s research interests lie within the discovery of low-dimensional quantum materials through atomic-scale synthesis, spectroscopy characterization, and device development leveraging interface states and emergent quantum effects.

https://engineering.uci.edu/users/qi-song

Prof. Ty Christoff-Tempesta joins the ChAMP Program

Fall 2024

Ty Christoff-Tempesta is an Assistant Professor of Materials Science and Engineering

Prof. Christoff-Tempesta specializes in molecular design to engineer hierarchical properties in soft matter systems, combining organic chemistry, molecular self-assembly, and polymer science to create innovative materials. His group focuses on advancing sustainable materials with circular life cycles, derived from renewable resources, and designed for recyclability or upcyclability.

Current research activities include (1) developing new molecular design principles for sustainable materials, (2) using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy to study nanoscale dynamics and establish design rules for material behavior, and (3) designing functional supramolecular materials that self-organize and scale from nanoscale to macroscale. The lab’s research aims to address critical global challenges, such as providing sustainable alternatives to plastics, improving environmental remediation, and advancing technologies for energy and healthcare applications.

https://faculty.sites.uci.edu/tctlab/

Welcome 2024 ChAMP students!

Prof. Lorenzo Valdevit joins the ChAMP Program

Summer 2024

Lorenzo Valdevit is a Professor and Chair of Materials Science and Engineering

Prof. Valdevit works in the general areas of mechanics of materials, structural materials science and advanced manufacturing, developing analytical, numerical and experimental techniques across multiple length scales. Among his primary research goals are the optimal design, modeling, fabrication and experimental characterization of metamaterials and structures with unprecedented combinations of properties. Current areas of interest are the investigation and exploitation of beneficial size effects in nano-architected materials, the non-linear design of periodic and disordered mechanical metamaterials, and the understanding of the processing / microstructure / properties relations in additive manufacturing (in particular, two-photon polymerization Direct Laser Writing, Direct Ink Writing, Laser Powder Bed Fusion and Cold Spray Deposition).

https://valdevit.eng.uci.edu

Prof. Alvin Yu join the ChAMP Program

Summer 2024

Alvin Yu is an Assistant Professor of Physiology & Biophysics

Many cellular processes that are considered the hallmarks of living systems undergo physical and chemical processes ranging from atomic-scale phenomena, including the quantum chemistry of bond cleavage, to micrometer-sized processes such as the self-assembly of proteins. These processes are innately multiscale and span time and length scales from the molecular to mesoscopic. Alvin Yu’s research group investigates the mechanisms by which biological processes function and elucidates them using theory, computational modeling, and simulations.

https://faculty.uci.edu/profile/?facultyId=7131

Prof. Matthew Sheldon joins the ChAMP Program

Fall 2023

Matthew Sheldon is an Associate Professor of Chemistry

Sheldon’s research group studies fundamental questions about optical energy conversion relating to plasmonic and inorganic nanoscale materials. Experiments are principally designed to identify and optimize unique nanoscale phenomena that are useful for solar energy, as well as related opportunities at the intersection of nanophotonics and chemistry, for broad application beyond the scope of solar energy. Current research activities explore how nanofabricated materials can provide systematic control over the thermodynamic parameters governing optical power conversion. By controllably shaping, confining, and interconverting the energy and entropy of a radiation field, several different classes of light-powered heat engines become possible. 

Prof. Robert Nielsen joins the ChAMP Program

Fall 2023
Robert Nielsen is an Assistant Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering.
Nielson’s research interests include quantum mechanical, microkinetic, and data modeling to understand and control chemical reactivity. His group has recently begun a general effort to replace screening in computational materials design problems with optimization.  The process combines some representation of Schrodinger’s equation, stat mech, kinetic modeling, traditional chemistry ideas and data science.
https://engineering.uci.edu/users/robert-nielsen

Prof. Sabee Molloi joins the ChAMP Program

Summer 2023

Sabee Molloi is a Professor & Vice Chairman of Research, Radiological Sciences

Molloi’s research interests include quantitative aspects of medical x-ray imaging and its applications to cardiac and breast imaging.

Some of his current projects include:

  • Spectral breast CT
  • Myocardial blood flow measurement using CT and its applications to coronary artery disease
  • Pulmonary blood flow measurement using CT and its applications to lung disease
  • Quantification of myocardial mass at risk
  • Detection of ischemic stroke using dual energy CT

https://faculty.uci.edu/profile/?facultyId=3212

2023 Summer BBQ

ChAMP ushered in the new class at our annual summer BBQ on July 14th. Welcome students!

Prof. Elizabeth Lee joins the ChAMP program

Fall 2022

Elizabeth lee is an Assistant Professor of Materials Science and Engineering.

Lee’s research interests lie within the broad field of computational materials and chemistry, particularly electronic and chemical processes in solid-state and nanostructured semiconductors. Her research aims to bring fundamental understanding of how the dynamical arrangement of atoms and their electronic structure impact the material-wide properties during their synthesis, processing, and device operating conditions.

Current research activities focus on three areas: (1) quantum point defects in semiconductors, (2) solid-state interfaces in materials for energy applications, and (3) methodological developments for materials modeling using machine learning approaches.

(https://engineering.uci.edu/users/elizabeth-my-lee)

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