Prof. Moungi G Bawendi

Lester Wolfe Professor of Chemistry

Primary DLC

Department of Chemistry

MIT Room: 6-221

Areas of Interest and Expertise

Physical Chemistry
Inorganic Chemistry
Materials Chemistry
Electronic Structure of Semiconductor Clusters
Diluted Magnetic Semiconductor Clusters (DMS)
Nanometer-Size Fragments of Semiconducting Inorganic Solids
Electronic, Magnetic, and Vibrational Properties of Nanoclusters
Synthesis and Properties of Nanocrystallites and Quantum Dots
Nanoscience
Solar Energy
Active Packaging; Moisture/Oxygen

Research Summary

The Bawendi Lab’s research ranges from the very fundamental to applications in electro-optics and biology. There is an ongoing synthetic effort underlying all of this to address the challenges of making new compositions and morphologies of nanocrystals and nanocrystal heterostructures, and new ligands so that the nanocrystals can be incorporated into hybrid organic/inorganic devices, or biological systems.

The fundamental spectroscopic focus is largely at the single dot level, were we are currently developing methods for probing the dynamical properties of the electronic structure of dots at time scales between 100 psec and 1 msec. The group is also investigating the physics of multiexcitons in various quantum dots using both ensemble time resolved methods, as well as single quantum dot correlation spectroscopies. They are studying the charge transport properties of films of dots or dot/organic hybrids, within our group and with collaborators. These fundamental transport properties are critical for designing devices like electrically quantum dot based driven light emittiers, lasers, photodetectors and photovoltaics.

The Bawendi Lab is studying these three classes of devices, also within our group and with collaborators. On the biology and biomedical side, they are collaborating with a number of biology and medical groups to design nanocrystal probes that meet specific challenges. These include nanocrystals that selectively bind to single receptors on cell surfaces for tracking applications, creating “smart” nanocrystals that sense analytes to report back on concentrations of species, including for example pH, which is important for following endocytotic pathways and tumor microenvironments, and systematic characterizations of the effect of size, morphology, charge, and other surface compositions, on the uptake (or clearance) of nanocrystals. This last information is critical for the design of nanocrystal probes as molecular imaging agents in vivo.

Professor Bawendi is an advisor for the Minor in Energy Studies.

Recent Work

  • Video

    10.2021-Sense.nano-Moungi-Bawendi

    October 26, 2021Conference Video Duration: 13:47
    Moungi Bawendi | Professor, MIT Chemistry

    10.2021-Sense.nano-Introduction-for-Session 3-Imaging-Q-A

    October 26, 2021Conference Video Duration: 20:17

    Brian Anthony | Associate Director, MIT.nano
    Moungi Bawendi
    Lester Wolfe Professor of Chemistry
    MIT Department of Chemistry
    Juejun (JJ) Hu
    Associate Professor, Department of Materials Science & Engineering
    Daniel Moyer
    Postdoctoral Associate, MIT Computer Science & Artificial Intelligence Lab

    Moungi Bawendi - 2018 RD Conference

    November 21, 2018Conference Video Duration: 35:47

    Toward Nanocrystal Sensors

    Our laboratory focuses on the science and applications of nanocrystals, especially semiconductor nanocrystal (aka quantum dots). Our research ranges from the very fundamental to applications in electro-optics and biology. There is an ongoing effort to address the challenges of making new compositions and morphologies of nanocrystals and nanocrystal heterostructures, and new ligands so that the nanocrystals can be incorporated into hybrid organic/inorganic devices, or biological systems. We are collaborating with a number of biology and medical groups to design nanocrystal probes that meet specific challenges.

    2018 MIT Research and Development Conference