News

  • New faculty: Rizia Bardhan finds solutions at the nanoscale

    New faculty: Rizia Bardhan finds solutions at the nanoscale

    Rizia Bardhan has a large picture of Mahatma Gandhi in her office. “Gandhi has always been very special to me,” she said. “We share the same birthday. He exemplifies the power of perseverance.” Perseverance has carried the new assistant professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering to Nashville from… Read More

    Dec. 11, 2012

  • Nanoscience and nanotechnology minor offered

    Nanoscience and nanotechnology minor offered

    In an effort to respond to students’ rapidly growing interest in nanoscale technology, a new 15-hour interdisciplinary minor in nanoscience and nanotechnology is being offered by the School of Engineering and the College of Arts and Science. Directors are Paul E. Laibinis, professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering,… Read More

    Oct. 15, 2012

  • Grant will help professor develop battery to aid home energy use

    Grant will help professor develop battery to aid home energy use

    Peter Pintauro, H. Eugene McBrayer Professor of Chemical Engineering and chair of the chemical and biomolecular engineering department, has partnered with researchers from the University of Kansas and TVN Systems, Inc. on a three-year, $1.72 million grant from the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) of the U.S. Department of Energy… Read More

    Oct. 11, 2012

  • VINSE Welcomes Cary Pint

    VINSE Welcomes Cary Pint

    Cary M. Pint, assistant professor of mechanical engineering B.S., University of Northern Iowa, 2005 M.S., Rice University, 2009 Ph.D., Rice University, 2010 Pint’s research interests focus on nanomate rials development for efficient and integrated energy storage and conversion devices. This… Read More

    Sep. 9, 2012

  • VINSE Welcomes Philippe Fauchet

    VINSE Welcomes Philippe Fauchet

    Philippe M. Fauchet, dean of the School of Engineering; professor of electrical engineering B.S., Faculte Polytechnique de Mons, 1978 M.S., Brown University, 1980 Ph.D., Stanford University, 1984 Fauchet comes to Vanderbilt from the University of Rochester, where he served as Distinguished Professor and Chair… Read More

    Sep. 9, 2012

  • VINSE Welcomes Rizia Bardhan

    VINSE Welcomes Rizia Bardhan

    Rizia Bardhan, assistant professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering B.A., Westminster College, 2005  M.A., Rice University, 2007 Ph.D., Rice University, 2010 Bardhan’s research focuses on interdisciplinary nanoscience, with the convergence of multiple disciplines: engineering, material science, chemistry, physics… Read More

    Sep. 9, 2012

  • Spinach power gets a major boost

    Spinach power gets a major boost

    Spinach power has just gotten a big boost. An interdisciplinary team of researchers at Vanderbilt University have developed a way to combine the photosynthetic protein that converts light into electrochemical energy in spinach with silicon, the material used in solar cells, in a fashion that produces substantially more electrical current… Read More

    Sep. 4, 2012

  • Richard Haglund named Stevenson Chair of Physics

    Richard Haglund named Stevenson Chair of Physics

    Twelve Vanderbilt University faculty members were honored for extraordinary contributions to their respective fields during an Aug. 28 celebration of endowed chair holders at the Student Life Center. Jeff Balser, vice chancellor for health affairs and dean of the School of Medicine, noted during his opening remarks the… Read More

    Aug. 30, 2012

  • New research at Vanderbilt could help make quantum dots the future of superefficient lighting

    New research at Vanderbilt could help make quantum dots the future of superefficient lighting

    Unless you’re in the .05 percent of the population who enjoyed physics in high school, the term “quantum” probably calls to mind James Bond or Scott Bakula. But researchers at Vanderbilt University are working on a project that could bring the word into the everyday vernacular, and perhaps even have… Read More

    Aug. 16, 2012

  • Radiation damage bigger problem in microelectronics than previously thought

    Radiation damage bigger problem in microelectronics than previously thought

    The amount of damage that radiation causes in electronic materials may be at least 10 times greater than previously thought. That is the surprising result of a new characterization method that uses a combination of lasers and acoustic waves to provide scientists with a capability tantamount to X-ray vision: It… Read More

    Jul. 19, 2012