Pratik Dholabhai
Associate Professor
Pratik Dholabhai
Associate Professor
Education
BS, MS, Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda (India); MS, Ph.D., University of Texas at Arlington
Bio
Dr. Dholabhai received his B.S. in Physics and M.S. in Nuclear Physics from Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda (India), and his M.S. in Physics and Ph.D. in Physics & Applied Physics from the University of Texas at Arlington. After completing graduate studies, he worked at Arizona State University (2.5 years), Brookhaven National Laboratory (2 years), Los Alamos National Laboratory (4 years), and University of Colorado Boulder (6 months) before joining the School of Physics and Astronomy in Fall 2017.
Research area: Computational Condensed Matter Physics, Computational Materials Science, Materials Chemistry
Dr. Dholabhai's expertise is in applying atomistic simulation methods such as density functional theory and molecular dynamics and the development of kinetic Monte Carlo methods to study and design diverse materials. His research focuses on integrating fundamental physics, materials science, and chemistry in conjunction with state-of-the-art computational tools to investigate materials for a wide range of applications. He leverages fundamentally different, yet complementary atomistic simulation methods to elucidate the underlying mechanisms that control the properties of materials, and lead to nanoscale materials design. His recent work entails the study of basic structure-property relationships at heterointerfaces, grain boundaries, surfaces, and solids of complex ceramic oxides, which have important applications in next-generation energy technologies such as fuel cells, batteries, catalysis, nuclear materials, etc. A vital aspect of his work is comprehending the thermodynamics and kinetics of defects and their interaction with structural anomalies.
Select Scholarship
Currently Teaching
In the News
-
March 20, 2024
STEP scholars place first at upstate regional science competition with guidance from RIT faculty
Two high school STEP scholars, Calvin Davis and Alexia Savage, worked together on a research project that they showcased at various Junior Science and Humanities Symposium competitions. They first presented at the Central/Western New York Subregional JSHS competition, held in January at RIT. They placed first, which punched their ticket to the two-day regional event in Albany.
-
January 31, 2022
Scholars earn coveted early career awards
Three faculty members who chose to start their research careers at RIT received prestigious National Science Foundation CAREER Awards in 2021. Their research aims to advance the foundations of machine intelligence, artificial intelligence, and clean energy.
-
July 21, 2021
CAREER Awards advance promising research for future innovators and leaders
NSF Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award winners are among an elite group of research faculty on campus and across the country. CAREER Awards are just one of several indicators of a university’s growing research initiatives, funding sources, and faculty innovation.
-
March 24, 2025
Eisensmith and Dholabhai publish on colloidal quantum dots
-
July 29, 2024
Ebmeyer, Dholabhai publish on ionic conductivity at oxide interfaces
-
December 21, 2023
Dholabhai and Undergrad Research Scholar publish article in ‘Materials Advances’
-
August 23, 2023
Marzano, Dholabhai publish article on perovskites