Andrew Spakowitz, PhD

Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering

(650) 736-8733

My research lab is engaged in projects that address fundamental chemical and physical processes that underlie a range of key biological mysteries and cutting-edge material applications. Research projects within our lab fall within three broad themes: DNA biophysics, charge transport in conjugated polymers, and protein self-assembly.

Education

PhD, California Institute of Technology

MS, California Institute of Technology

BS University of Wisconsin, Madison

 

Research Interests

These broad research areas offer complementary perspectives on chemical and physical processes, and we leverage this complementarity throughout our research. Our approach draws from a diverse range of theoretical and computational methods, including analytical theory of semiflexible polymers, polymer field theory, continuum elastic mechanics, Brownian dynamics simulation, equilibrium and dynamic Monte Carlo simulations, and analytical theory and numerical simulations of reaction-diffusion phenomena.

A common thread among the problems that we address is the need to capture phenomena over many length and time scales, and our flexibility in research methodologies allows us to address these problems at an unprecedented level of precision. We are constantly challenging ourselves to maintain the highest level of mathematical rigor in our theoretical treatments while providing in-depth quantitative predictions that can be used to more efficiently develop new materials and therapeutics.

Publications

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