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Todd Martinez

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Residence
  
U.S.

Doctoral advisor
  
Emily A. Carter

Name
  
Todd Martinez


Alma mater
  
Calvin College UCLA

Nationality
  
American

Awards
  
MacArthur Fellowship

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Institutions
  
Stanford University University of Illinois

Known for
  
ab initio multiple spawning technique for excited states dynamics; Hijacking videogame hardware for quantum chemistry

Notable awards
  
MacArthur Fellow (2005)

Education
  
Calvin College, University of California, Los Angeles

Fields
  
Physical Chemistry, Theoretical chemistry

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Todd J. Martínez is a David Mulvane Ehrsam and Edward Curtis Franklin Professor of Chemistry at Stanford University and a Professor of Photon Science at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.

Contents

Todd Martinez Todd Martinez Department of Chemistry

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Life

He received his B.S. from Calvin College in 1989 and his Ph.D. from UCLA in 1994. He was a Fulbright Fellow at the Fritz Haber Institute for Molecular Dynamics at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Israel and a University of California Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow at UCLA for two years prior to joining the faculty at the University of Illinois in 1996. He was named a Gutgsell Professor of Chemistry at the University of Illinois in 2006. He joined the Stanford faculty in 2009.

Professor Martínez is a theoretical chemist whose research focuses primarily on developing first-principles approaches to chemical reaction dynamics, starting from the fundamental equations of quantum mechanics. He is particularly interested in electronically excited states and the response of molecules to light. Reactions of electronically excited molecules often involve conical intersections, around which the potential energy surfaces have the shape of intersecting cones. He developed a method known as ab initio multiple spawning, or AIMS, which predicts the dynamic evolution of systems having conical intersections. He has created models for photoinduced isomerization in retinal, which represents the biophysical basis for vision. He has also shown how videogame hardware, especially graphical processing units (GPUs), can be used to accelerate quantum chemistry simulations.

Martínez's research has been supported by an NSF Career Award, a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship, a Packard Foundation Fellowship, a Sloan Foundation Fellowship, a Beckman Young Investigators Award, a Research Innovation Award, a Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award, and grants from the NSF, DOE, NIH, Research Corporation, and the Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP). He was elected to the American Academy of Arts & Sciences in 2011.

Representative publications

  • Insights for Light-Driven Molecular Devices from Ab Initio Multiple Spawning Dynamics, T. J. Martinez, Acc. Chem. Res., 39, 119 (2006). doi:10.1021/ar040202q
  • Competitive Decay at Two and Three-State Conical Intersections in Excited State Intramolecular Proton Transfer, J. D. Coe and T. J. Martinez, J. Amer. Chem. Soc. 127, 4560 (2005). doi:10.1021/ja043093j
  • Conical Intersection Dynamics in Solution: The Chromophore of Green Fluorescent Protein, A. Toniolo, S. Olsen, L. Manohar, and T. J. Martínez, Faraday Disc., 127, 149 (2004). doi:10.1039/b401167h
  • Group Web Site

    http://mtzweb.stanford.edu/

    References

    Todd Martinez Wikipedia


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