Department of Chemistry
Oregon State University

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Mas Subramanian Materials Chemistry

Milton Harris Professor of Materials Science and Signature Faculty Fellow, Oregon Nanoscience and Microtechnologies Institute (ONAMI)

Education: B.S. University of Madras, India (1975); M.S. University of Madras, India (1977); Ph.D. Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, India (1981); Post-Doctoral Fellow, Texas A&M University (1982-84)

Awards: DuPont Charles Pedersen Medal Award for Excellence in Scientific and Technical Achievement (2004); Ralf Busch Materials Science Seminar Award, OSU (2007)

Email: mas.subramanian@oregonstate.edu
Office: Wenigar Hall 339
Phone: (541) 737-8235
Fax: (541) 737-2062

Research group web site

Research Interests: Materials Chemistry

Our research efforts focus on designing new inorganic solid state functional materials for emerging applications in electronics, solid-state energy conversion and other areas. In this quest, we rely on rational design of solids through fundamental understanding of crystal structure/property relationships as well as empirical and theoretical models. We are particularly inspired by the challenges involved in developing design concepts for functional materials with conflicting or “contraindicating” property requirements as seen in thermoelectrics, multiferroics, temperature independent high K dielectrics and materials exhibiting negative thermal expansion.

Our synthetic strategies extend beyond making bulk solid-state materials (single-crystals and ceramics), to building nanoparticulates and self-assembled nanostructures from solutions, solvothermal/hydrothermal methods and other ‘bottom-up’ synthetic routes.

Our work has resulted in many breakthrough discoveries. Some recent examples are: temperature independent colossal dielectrics (e.g. CaCu3Ti4O12), ferromagnetic semiconductors with a Curie temperature close to room temperature (e.g. La2NiMnO6), a giant magnetodielectric response at room temperature in LuFe2O4, high ZT thermoelectric materials based on skutterudites with indium “rattlers” (e.g. In0.2Co3Sb12) for converting waste-heat to electricity, and a "greener" synthetic route for hydrofluorocarbons via rationally designed inorganic fluorides.


Representative Publications