User:Kunal Mehta: Difference between revisions
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== | ==Links== | ||
*[[ | |||
*[[ | ====Academic==== | ||
*[http://schmidtlab.seas.ucla.edu/ Jacob Schmidt lab] | |||
*[http://bayley.chem.ox.ac.uk Hagan Bayley lab] | |||
*[http://www.stanford.edu/group/swartzlab James Swartz lab] | |||
====Cool==== | |||
*[http://www.flickr.com/photos/kkmehta My Flickr photostream] | |||
*[http://www.facebook.com/kkmehta Find me on facebook] | |||
<small><i>N.B., The labeling of the second set of links as "Cool" is in no way meant to suggest that the other links are not also "cool".</i></small> |
Revision as of 12:03, 29 July 2010
Kunal K Mehta (કુનાલ કારતિક મહેતા)
I grew up in Orange County, and went to college at UCLA, where I worked with Jacob Schmidt in Bioengineering. After that, I spent a year (2008-2009) doing research with Hagan Bayley in Oxford. More recently, I’ve just completed my first year as a PhD student in Bioengineering at Stanford. After finishing the PhD, I plan to work in a small biotechnology company. At some point in my career I also want to work in a teaching capacity, perhaps at a liberal arts college or community college.
Outside of work, I enjoy landscape/architecture photography and music. Last year I played the violin in the pit orchestra for one of Stanford’s theatrical production societies, as well as a more conventional symphony orchestra. I also very much enjoy traveling, and try to see new places whenever I can.
Contact Info
Physical address:
Stanford University
Department of Chemical Engineering
Keck 155
Stanford, CA 94305
kkmehta {at} stanford
949.636.4345
I work in the Swartz lab at Stanford University.
Education
- 2010, MSc, University of Oxford
- 2008, BS, University of California, Los Angeles
Research interests
My general interest is in employing biological structures and processes in engineered systems to enable the production of industrial chemicals by environmentally sustainable methods. My current project involves developing and characterizing a system of proteins that could be used to produce molecular hydrogen in bacteria. I’m also interested in physics and engineering applications related to membrane proteins, and single-molecule DNA sequencing technologies.
Publications
- Purnell RF, Mehta KK, and Schmidt JJ. Nucleotide identification and orientation discrimination of DNA homopolymers immobilized in a protein nanopore. Nano Lett. 2008 Sep;8(9):3029-34. DOI:10.1021/nl802312f |
leave a comment about a paper here
- ISBN:0879697164
Links
Academic
Cool
N.B., The labeling of the second set of links as "Cool" is in no way meant to suggest that the other links are not also "cool".