Distinguished Lectureship in Nanoscience

March 17, 2022

Professor Joanna Aizenberg

Amy Smith Berylson Professor of Materials Science
Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology
Co-Director, Master of Design Engineering
Harvard University

Colloidal Crystallization: from Structural Color to Encryption, to Medical Diagnostics to Catalysis

This lecture will introduce a reproducible, one-pot sol-gel colloidal co-assembly approach that results in large-scale, highly ordered inverse opal films with embedded, uniformly distributed, and accessible nanoparticles. The unique coloration of these inverse opals combines iridescence with plasmonic effects. When locally functionalized, these films exhibit a sharply defined threshold wettability for infiltration that couples to macroscopic color changes. This approach may find applications in a broad range of technologies, including a convenient and direct method for liquid detection and encryption, or as a tag for low-cost monitoring of tampering or material aging. Extension of this methodology to create a new class of highly stable heterogeneous catalysts will also be discussed.

Joanna Aizenberg received the B.S. degree in Chemistry from Moscow State University, and the Ph.D. degree in Structural Biology from the Weizmann Institute of Science. After spending nearly a decade at Bell Labs, Joanna joined Harvard University, where she is the Amy Smith Berylson Professor of Materials Science and Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology.

The Aizenberg lab's research is aimed at understanding some of the basic principles of biological architecture and the economy with which nature solves complex problems in the design of multifunctional, adaptive materials. These biological principles are then used as guidance in developing new, bio-inspired synthetic routes and nanofabrication strategies that would lead to advanced materials and devices, with broad implications in fields ranging from architecture to energy efficiency to medicine. Research topics of interest include biomimetics, smart materials, wetting phenomena, bio-nano interfaces, self-assembly, surface chemistry, structural color, metamaterials and catalysis.

Aizenberg is elected to the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Philosophical Society, American Association for the Advancement of Science; and she is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, Materials Research Society and External Member of the Max Planck Society. Dr. Aizenberg’s select awards include: MRS Medal, Kavli Innovations in Chemistry Leader Award, ACS; Fred Kavli Distinguished Lectureship in Nanoscience, MRS; Ronald Breslow Award for the Achievement in Biomimetic Chemistry, ACS; and Harvard’s Ledlie Prize for the most valuable contribution to science. She has >280 publications, >90 issued patents, and is a Founder of four start-up companies.

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