Matthew Tirrell

Matthew Tirrell

Matthew Tirrell specializes in the manipulation and measurement of the surface properties of polymers, materials that consist of long, flexible chain molecules. His work combines microscopic measurements of intermolecular forces with creation of new structures. His work has provided new insight into polymer properties, especially surface phenomena such as adhesion, friction and biocompatibility, and new materials based on self-assembly of synthetic and bio-inspired materials. 

Tirrell came to the University of Chicago from the University of California at Berkeley, where he served as the Arnold and Barbara Silverman Professor and chair of the Department of Bioengineering, as professor of materials science and engineering and chemical engineering, and as a faculty scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. He has received many honors, including election to the National Academy of Engineering, the National Academy of Sciences, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Prior to his appointment at Berkeley, Tirrell served for a decade as dean of engineering at UC Santa Barbara, where he helped build the program's national prominence.

Tirrell Stories

U of Chicago, Ben Gurion U co-focus on water

UChicago partners with Israel’s Ben-Gurion University to create technologies to address water purification and scarcity issues


San Diego Jewish World

Great lakes, great people

Prof. Matthew Tirrell discusses designing nano solutions for purifying and preserving water supply


Alliance for Great Lakes

Israeli-Chicago plan to study water shortages touted

Institute for Molecular Engineering Dir. Matthew Tirrell will direct Chicago team in research partnership with Jerusalem's Ben-Gurion University


Vision for molecular engineering takes shape

New Institute for Molecular Engineering charts future with eminent founding faculty members.


Steve Koppes

Vision for molecular engineering takes shape

New Institute for Molecular Engineering charts future with eminent founding faculty members.

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