Muscat Research Group
- Anthony J. Muscat
- Associate Professor
- Department of Chemical & Environmental Engineering
- University of Arizona
- Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
- Building/Room: Harshbarger/134D
- Telephone: 520-626-6580
- Fax: 520-626-5397
- E-mail: muscat at erc.arizona.edu
Education
- 2004-05 Sabbatical Research, Interuniversity MicroElectronics Center (IMEC) and Department of Metallurgy and Materials Engineering, Katholic University, Leuven, Belgium
- 1993-95 Postdoctoral Research Associate, Department of Chemical Engineering, MIT, Cambridge, MA, Professor Herb H. Sawin, mentor
- 1993 Ph.D., Chemical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA. Dissertation title: "The Effects of Sulfur on the Thermodynamics and Kinetics of Adsorbed CO Overlayers on Ni(100)," Professor Robert J. Madix, advisor
- 1990-93 Postdoctoral Research Associate, Department of Physics, University of Laval, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada, Professor Denis Roy, mentor
- 1987-88 Internship, IBM Almaden Research Center, San Jose, CA, Dr. Helmut Poppa, mentor
- 1983 M.Sc. Chemical Engineering, Stanford University
- 1982 B.Sc. Chemical Engineering, University of California, Davis
Employment
- 2003-present Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering, Univ. of Arizona, Tucson, AZ
- 1998-2003 Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering, Univ. of Arizona, Tucson, AZ
- 1995-1997 Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering, San Jose State Univ., San Jose, CA
Recognition
- 2007, 2004, 2001, 1999, 1998 Excellence at the Student Interface, University of Arizona, Department of Chemical & Environmental Engineering
- 2005 da Vinci Circle Fellowship UA College of Engineering
- 2003 Scientific American 50, Policy Leader in Chemicals and Materials
- 1998 Professor of the Year, Tau Beta Pi, University of Arizona Chapter
- 1998 National Science Foundation CAREER Award
Research Interests
My group's research interests are in surface chemistry and interfaces, specifically the chemical processes used to clean, etch, or deposit on the surfaces of solids. An understanding of surface chemistry and interfaces can be used to optimize existing materials used in microelectronics or catalysis and develop new materials with unique properties. The primary research goal is learning how chemical reactions take place on surfaces. Understanding the reaction mechanism provides a means to rationally design interfaces for specific purposes. Current research projects include 1) engineering the surfaces of semiconductors (Si, Ge, InAs, InGaAs) for advanced electronic and optoelectronic devices, 2) synthesis of nanoparticles such as quantum dots (clusters of atoms 1-5 nm in diameter), 3) dealloying metal alloys using supercritical CO2 to make nanoporous films and composites, and 4) sustainable manufacturing of nanometer-scale devices using biological molecules, which is a collaboration with the Department of Biochemistry and the Optical Sciences Center. We approach these problems by using experiments and modeling to understand the mechanisms of the surface chemical reactions that are at the heart of these technologies. My students are trained to apply the principles of surface chemistry and physics to a wide variety of problems and applications.
Team
Postdoctoral Researchers
- Zhengtao Deng
- Babak Imangholi
Graduate Students
- Fee Li Lie
- Rahul Jain
- Davoud Zamani
- Feng Jiang
- Shawn Miller
- Amy Ng
- Bernal Granados
Alumni
- Rachel Morrish (Ph.D. ChemE 2009)
- Javier Torres, Assistant professor, Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador (postdoc 2007-08)
- Gary Fleming, New Zealand (postdoc 2007-08)
- Shariq Shiddiqui, University of Arizona Ph.D. candidate (M.S. ChemE 2008)
- Adam Thorsness, Lam Research (Ph.D. ChemE 2006)
- Gerardo Montano, Intel (Ph.D. ChemE 2006)
- Hongbin Zhu, Micron (Ph.D. ChemE 2005)
- Michael Durando, Boston University M.D./Ph.D. candidate (M.S. ChemE 2005)
- Bo Xie, Applied Materials (Ph.D. ChemE 2005)
- Sarah Perry, University of Illinois Ph.D. candidate (M.S. ChemE 2005)
- Casey Finstad, Texas Instruments (Ph.D. ChemE 2004)