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Winner: 2020 Corday-Morgan Prizes

Professor Madhavi Krishnan

University of Oxford

For the invention of a ‘field free’ trap for confining and manipulating a single colloidal particle or molecule, enabling accurate and precise measurements of molecular charge in aqueous solution.

Professor Madhavi Krishnan

A microscopic bit of matter in solution is in continuous motion. Pummelled at random by the solvent, it engages in a randomly directed walk that will eventually take it far away from where it was first observed. At the nanoscale, even gravity is too weak to influence the trajectory of the object, however, placing surfaces in the vicinity puts new forces into play. 

By appropriately tailoring the geometry of the walls, Professor Krishnan’s research group is able to harness these intrinsic object-wall forces and manoeuvre their entity of interest into a desired spatial location and orientation in a fluid. Once there, the object levitates stably for long periods. 

The group are pioneering the use of the "electrostatic fluidic trap" in order to realise new experiments in the spatial control, manipulation, and measurement of nanoscale matter in solution. Their primary focus is on biological molecules such as proteins and DNA. Using this new approach to trapping molecules they have developed a way to measure the electrical charge of a single biomolecule in solution with high precision. 

Not only does this new measurement technique open up hitherto unforeseen avenues in fundamental science, but the technological implications for society are significant. The electrostatic fluidic trap provides a new technological platform for highly sensitive and precise measurements of small changes in biomolecular properties that could be central to the diagnosis and detection of disease states and may therefore make a significant contribution to diagnostic and biomedical detection approaches of the future.

Biography 

Professor Madhavi Krishnan is currently Associate Professor of Physical º£½ÇÉçÇø at the University of Oxford. She completed her undergraduate work at Anna University, Madras, India followed by a PhD at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. Supported by Alexander von Humboldt and Marie Curie Fellowships she carried out postdoctoral work in single molecule biophysics and nano-optics at Technical University Dresden and ETH Zurich respectively. 

In 2012, following a brief stint as a Visiting Scholar at Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences she was appointed Assistant Professor in Physical º£½ÇÉçÇø at the University of Zurich and received a Professorship of the Swiss National Science Foundation. 

She was awarded the 2016 Nernst- Haber-Bodenstein prize of the German Bunsen Society for Physical º£½ÇÉçÇø for her research which examines molecular electrostatics in the fluid phase, including both experiment and theory. 

At Oxford since 2018, Professor Krishnan leads a multi-disciplinary research team at the Physical and Theoretical º£½ÇÉçÇø Laboratory supported by an ERC Consolidator Grant. At various stages her research has received broad press coverage including in leading national dailies like NRC Handelsblad (Netherlands) and Neue Zuercher Zeitung (Switzerland).

One of the feelings I love most about science is that any given day could be the one on which you make a discovery or gain some startling new insight.

Professor Madhavi Krishnan

Q&A with Professor Madhavi Krishnan

What motivates you?
I enjoy the opportunity to explore the unknown, in the process creating knowledge as well as new technologies. It is one of the most gratifying feelings to chance upon a phenomenon in the lab, or come up with an explanation for an observation, of which we didn’t have a clue of the day before. One of the feelings I love most about science is that any given day could be the one on which you make a discovery or gain some startling new insight.

What advice would you give to a young person considering a career in chemistry?
My advice to a young person interested in a career in science is that there are few if any recipes beyond following your nose and your interest at all times, and be true to yourself in all circumstances. Your path may not be broadly perceived as the easiest, but it’ll be a great ride.

What is an exciting scientific development on the horizon?
Cracking the like-charge attraction problem – I hope!

Why do you think interdisciplinary research and collaboration is important in science?
My career has been a study in interdisciplinary research and I cannot think of doing things any other way. Cross-disciplinary work opens up unique opportunities to see and do things differently. Activities considered interdisciplinary to begin with may end up nucleating fields of the future.

What is your favourite element?
Francium