Nicola Spaldin


Nicola Ann Spaldin FRS is Professor of Materials Theory at ETH Zurich, known for her pioneering research on multiferroics.

Education and early life

A native of Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, England, Spaldin earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Natural Sciences from the University of Cambridge in 1991, and a PhD in chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley in 1996.

Career and research

Spaldin was inspired to search for multiferroics, magnetic ferroelectric materials, by a remark about potential collaboration made by a colleague studying ferroelectrics during her postdoctoral research studying magnetic phenomena at Yale University from 1996 to 1997. She continued to develop the theory of these materials as a new faculty member at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and in 2000 published "a seminal article" that for the first time explained why few such materials were known. Following her theoretical predictions, in 2003 she was part of a team that experimentally demonstrated the multiferroic properties of bismuth ferrite. She moved from UCSB to ETH Zurich in 2010. Her publications are listed on Google scholar.

Awards and honours

Spaldin was the 2010 winner of the American Physical Society's James C. McGroddy Prize for New Materials, the Rössler Prize of the ETH Zurich Foundation in 2012, the 2015 winner of the Körber European Science Prize for "laying the theoretical foundation for the new family of multiferroic materials". and one of the laureates of the 2017 L'Oréal-UNESCO Awards for Women in Science. In November 2017 she was awarded the Lise-Meitner Lectureship of the Austrian and German Physical Societies in Vienna and in 2019 she won the Swiss Science Prize Marcel Benoist. In 2019, Spaldin was selected as the first Lead Editor of Physical Review Research.
Spaldin is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, the Materials Research Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Royal Society, and a Foreign Associate of the US National Academy of Engineering. She is an Honorary Fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge.