Dr. Khashayar Ghandi received his PhD in Radiation Chemistry from Simon Fraser University in 2002. He worked as a research associate both under supervision of Professor Fleming at TRIUMF and he worked as a visiting scientist at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the Oxford shire, UK. In 2005, he went on the work as an Associate Assistant professor at Mount Allison University and received early tenure. He joined the University of Guelph as a tenured Associate Professor in 2018. Ghandi’s research examines fundamental aspects and applications of chemistry and physics in health, energy, nanotechnology, and green chemistry. His research is carried out both at a conventional chemistry laboratory and within the TRIUMF national laboratory in Vancouver, ISIS at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the UK, ELYSE in the university of Paris/Saclay, and JPARC in Japan. His work includes computational work such as investigating electronic structures, quantum field theory, Monte Carlo simulations and Molecular dynamics, as well as hands on lab experiments, instrument design (including design of medical devices), spectroscopic studies, synthesis of novel material as well as data analysis. Key research themes include:
Applications of physical chemistry tools to other disciplines. Ghandi and his group collaborate with colleagues to explore applications of chemistry and physics in biology, medicine, commerce, and engineering.
Fundamental aspects of physical chemistry/chemical physics. Ghandi and his research group examine topics such as novel types of chemical bonds, kinetic isotope effects on reactions of state selected molecules, developing new spectroscopic techniques to study intermediates, chemistry under extreme conditions, and the role of external fields on electronic structure in atoms, molecules and material as well as modeling chemical reactions.