Assistant Professor
Mechanical Engineering

 Sumita Pennathur

Research

Sumita's research in the Nanoscale Device Laboratory is focused on novel studies of chemical and biological species using fabricated nanoscale devices with special attention to energy conversion.  The scope of the research program is broad, spanning the fields of Physics, Biology, Chemistry, and Engineering. The research goals are also broad, focusing on the fundamental science of nanoscale systems, while also exploring exciting technological possibilities.

Affiliations

Center for Energy Efficient Design, Member
Greenscale Center for Energy-Efficient Computing, Member

Biography

Pennathur began teaching at UCSB in the Mechanical Engineering department in July 2007. Her research group focuses on using fundamental fluidics knowledge at both micro- and nano -scales to create novel devices for practical applications. Major efforts include creating and developing enabling tools to identify and characterize biological substances, improving current bionalaytical devices, and designing/engineering entire systems for point-of-care usage. Prior to coming to UCSB, Pennathur taught at University of Twente. She has held multiple positions at various companies and schools such as: Sandia National Laboratories, Stanford University, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Tigris Corporation, and Lockheed Martin.

Honors

2012 Santa Barbara Chamber of Commerce Innovator of the Quarter
2010 Presidential Early Career Award in Science and Engineering
2009 UC Regents Junior Faculty Fellowship
2008 DARPA Young Faculty Award

Education

BS: Aerospace and Aeronautical Engineering, MIT (2000)
MS: Aerospace and Aeronautical Engineering, MIT (2001)
PhD: Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University (2006)

Lab Websites