Latha Venkataraman
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Latha Venkataraman | |
|---|---|
| Education | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
| Alma mater | Harvard University |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Applied physics, chemistry |
| Institutions | Columbia University |
| Thesis | Electronic properties of one-dimensional conductors: A study of molybdenum selenide molecular wires (1999) |
| Doctoral advisor | Charles Lieber |
| Website | www |
Latha Venkataraman is a physicist. She is a professor of applied physics and chemistry at Columbia University.
Venkataraman completed her BSc in Physics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1993, followed by Masters and PhD degrees at Harvard University.[1] Her thesis was titled Electronic properties of one-dimensional conductors: A study of molybdenum selenide molecular wires and was completed under Charles Lieber.[2]
She worked at Vytran Corporation before moving to Columbia University in 2003,[3] where she is currently the Lawrence Gussman Professor of Applied Physics[4] and Professor of Chemistry. Venkataraman served as Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs from January 2019 through June 2022.[1]
Research
Venkataraman researches fundamental properties of single-molecule devices, combining physics, chemistry, and engineering.
Honours and awards
- 2008 - National Science Foundation Career Award
- 2008 - Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering[5]
- 2011 - Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship in Chemistry
- 2015 - Fellow of the American Physical Society for "pioneering contributions to measurement and understanding of electron transport through single organic molecules"[6]