Alejandro Strachan


Alejandro Strachan is a scientist in the field of computational materials and a professor of materials engineering at Purdue University. Before joining Purdue University, he was a staff member at Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Education

Strachan studied physics at the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina. He received his master's of science there in 1995, followed by his PhD in 1998. He then moved to Caltech, first as a postdoctoral scholar and then research scientist, until 2002.

Research and career

Strachan became a staff scientist in the Theoretical Division of Los Alamos National Laboratory in 2002, staying until becoming a faculty member at Purdue in 2005. He became a full professor in 2013.
Strachan's research focuses on the development of predictive atomistic and molecular simulation methodologies to describe materials, primarily density functional theory and molecular dynamics. With these methods he studies problems of technological importance including coupled electronic, thermal, and mechanical processes in nano-electronics, MEMS and energy conversion devices; thermo-mechanical response and chemistry of polymers, polymer composites, and molecular solids; as well as active materials including shape-memory alloys and high-energy density materials. He also actively focuses on uncertainty quantification across the field of materials modelling.
He previously served as the Deputy Director of the NNSA Center for the Prediction of Reliability, Integrity and Survivability of Microsystems. He is currently co-principal investigator for the Network for Computational Nanotechnology and nanoHUB and co-leads the Center for Predictive Material and Devices, also with Klimeck.
Strachan is also active in education, particularly through nanoHUB, including the fully open and online course "From Atoms to Materials: Predictive Theories and Simulations".

Awards