Bio


Dan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University. Prior to Stanford, Dan received his B.S. and M.S. from Iowa State in 2011, working with Vik Dalal studying defect densities of nano-crystalline and amorphous silicon. He then received his PhD from MIT in Electrical Engineering in 2015, studying under Marc Baldo. His thesis work focused on photonic energy conversion using singlet fission and triplet fusion as downconverting and upconverting processes, respectively. He spent a year as a postdoc with Will Tisdale in Chemical Engineering at MIT studying perovskite nanoplatelets. He joined the Rowland Institute in 2016 as a Rowland Fellow before starting at Stanford in 2020. Dan is a Moore Inventor Fellow, Sloan Research Fellow, Intel Rising Star, and co-founder of Quadratic3D, a startup looking to commercialize 3D printing technologies. His current research interests focus on engineering nanomaterials to solve challenging problems.

Academic Appointments


Honors & Awards


  • Intel Rising Star, Intel (2023)
  • Sloan Research Fellow, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation (2022)
  • Moore Inventor Fellow, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (2019)
  • Rowland Fellow, Rowland Institute at Harvard University (2016-2020)

Professional Education


  • PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Electrical Engineering (2015)
  • MS, Iowa State University, Electrical Engineering (2011)
  • BS, Iowa State University, Electrical Engineering (2010)

Stanford Advisees