2022 Rustum and Della Roy Innovation in Materials Research Award winners include, clockwise from top left, Fabien Grisé, associate research professor of astronomy and astrophysics; Kunyan Zhang, doctoral candidate in electrical engineering; Lin Wang, post-doctoral scholar in mechanical engineering; Aida Ebrahimi, Thomas and Sheila Roell Early Career Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and Biomedical Engineering; Amir Sheikhi, assistant professor of chemical engineering and biomedical engineering (courtesy); Akhil Dodda, engineering science and mechanics doctoral student; and Nichole Wonderling, X-ray scattering manager, Materials Research Institute. Credit: Penn State
Materials Research Institute names 2022 Roy Award Winners
November 21, 2022
By Jamie Oberdick
Editor’s note: This article originally appeared on Penn State News. Five award winners from the College of Engineering were featured.
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Seven Penn State materials researchers have received the 2022 Rustum and Della Roy Innovation in Materials Research Award.
The award is presented by the Materials Research Institute (MRI) and recognizes interdisciplinary materials research at Penn State that yields innovative and unexpected results. The award has expanded this year to include four categories: Junior Faculty, Non-Tenure Faculty and Research Staff, Post-Doctoral, and Graduate Student. The award exists thanks to a gift from Della and Rustum Roy, who are both late alumni of Penn State’s College of Earth and Mineral Sciences and long-serving faculty in the college.
This year’s winners were announced at the 2022 Materials Day event in October. They include in the Junior Faculty category, Aida Ebrahimi, Thomas and Sheila Roell Early Career Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and Biomedical Engineering, and Amir Sheikhi, assistant professor of chemical engineering and biomedical engineering (courtesy). In the Non-Tenure Faculty and Research Staff category, the winners include Nichole Wonderling, X-ray scattering manager, MRI, and Fabien Grisé, associate research professor of astronomy and astrophysics. In the Post-Doctoral category, the winner is Lin Wang, postdoctoral scholar in mechanical engineering, and in the Graduate Student category, the winners include Akhil Dodda, engineering science and mechanics doctoral student, and Kunyan Zhang, doctoral candidate in electrical engineering.
Award winners from the College of Engineering are profiled below.
Ebrahimi’s research revolves around advancing biosensors and bioanalytical platforms for health monitoring through a multidisciplinary approach that involves materials and device engineering, devising novel sensing modalities and convergence with advanced data analytics.
“Applications and potential impact of these innovations are diverse and range from noninvasive and affordable medical diagnostics for early disease detection, drug screening, food safety and environmental monitoring to life science research related to microbial cells or elucidating the role of therapeutic factors in reducing symptoms of neurological diseases such as Parkinson’s disease,” Ebrahimi said.
Sheikhi’s multifaceted research via his Bio-Soft Materials Laboratory focuses primarily on micro- and nanoengineering of natural or semi-natural materials to develop functional soft matter/biomaterials with tailored structure-property relationships for health care and environmental applications.
“Our overarching goal is to provide transformative platforms based on renewable resources that can set the stage for affordable, widespread technologies with immediate benefits for humans and ecosystems,” Sheikhi said. “Together, these platforms show the power of chemistry in harnessing nature’s building blocks to develop eminent, cost-effective technologies for improving the quality of modern life.”
Focusing on bio-inspired materials, Wang translates the design principles of natural materials to synthetic materials using cutting-edge fabrication technologies.
“Nature can always provide inspiration for the design of advanced materials,” Wang said. “After evolving for billions of years, many plants and insects have developed intriguing properties that can be used to address grand challenges facing humans.”
Dodda’s doctoral research focused on implementing energy-efficient optoelectronic systems for sensing, storage, computing and developing novel security primitives using two-dimensional materials. This research could help to meet security and privacy needs in the rapidly evolving digital era, such as a smart and secure Internet of Things.
“With the emergence of the Internet of Things and its critical role in our day-to-day applications, securing information from unsavory hands has become a greater concern than ever before,” Dodda said.
Zhang's research focuses on improving the sensitivity of biological sensors using nanomaterials for early detection of life-threatening medical conditions that enables best-case treatment options and increasing survival rates.
“The improved sensitivity of biological sensors can realize noninvasive detection by monitoring biomarkers in sweat or saliva, and such biological sensors could also be widely applicable to a range of diseases or even subtypes of certain diseases,” Zhang said.