Dr. Angela Belcher is a materials chemist with expertise
in the fields of biomaterials, biomolecular materials, organic-inorganic
interfaces and solid state chemistry. The focus of Dr. Belchers
research is understanding and using the process by which Nature
makes materials in order to design novel hybrid organic-inorganic
electronic and magnetic materials on new length scales. Her
research is very interdisciplinary in nature and brings together
the fields of inorganic chemistry, materials chemistry, biochemistry,
molecular biology and electrical engineering. Among her awards
are the Presidential Early Career Award in Science and Engineering
(2000), and the Du Pont Young Investigators Award (1999).
Her research was mentioned in a July 2001 Forbes magazine
cover story on nanotechnology.
Selected Publications
Ordering of Quantum Dots Using Genetically Engineered
Viruses, Science296 (5569) 892895
2002 (with others).
Selection of Peptides with Semiconductor Binding Specificity
for Directed Nanocrystal Assembly, Nature405
(6787) 665668, 2000 (with others).
Molecular Mechanistic Origin of the Toughness of Natural
Adhesives, Fibres and Composites, Nature399
(6738) 761763, 1999 (with others).
First Steps in Harnessing the Potential of Biomineralization
as a Route to High-Performance Composite Materials,
Acta Metal. Mater., 23 46 (3) 733-736, 1998
(with others).
Listen to Prof. Belcher's podcast on Green Nanotechnology. Professor Belcher was one of the speakers for Technology
Day 2005: Bioengineering at MIT: Building Bridges Between
the Sciences, Engineering and Health Care (Part One). See MIT World for her talk and more about the day's events. The Fall 2005 Spectrum reported her use of viruses to assist in fabricating nanostructures.
Professor Belcher's MacArthur Fellowship, known as the "Genius
Grant," was reported in Tech
Talk and the Boston
Globe.
Professor Belcher will lead the Institute for Collaborative
Biotechnologies; the MIT
News Office, the November 2003 issue of Materials
Today, and the February
2004 Technology Review have further details. Tech
Talk reported on seven MIT women who have been named
"Top Scientists" in 2002; Professor Belcher has been named
one of Popular Science magazine's "PopSci Brilliant 10." Her
research was recently mentioned in Technology
Insider, The
MIT Report, Technology
Review, and the February 12, 2004 issue of The
New York Times.