Alessio Zaccone


Alessio Zaccone is an Italian physicist.

Career and research

After a PhD at ETH Zurich, he held faculty positions at Technical University Munich, University of Cambridge and at the Physics Department of the University of Milan. In 2015 he was elected a Fellow of Queens' College, Cambridge.
Zaccone contributed to various areas of condensed matter physics.
He is known for his work on the atomic theory of elasticity and viscoelasticity of amorphous solids, in particular for having developed the microscopic theory of elasticity of random sphere packings and elastic random networks. With Konrad Samwer he developed the Krausser–Samwer–Zaccone equation for the viscosity of liquids.
With Eugene Terentjev he developed a molecular-level theory of the glass transition based on thermoelasticity, which provides the molecular-level derivation of the Flory–Fox equation for the glass transition temperature of polymers.
He is also known for having developed, in his PhD thesis, the extension of DLVO theory that describes the stability of colloidal systems in fluid dynamic conditions based on a new solution to the Smoluchowski convection–diffusion equation. The predictions of the theory have been extensively verified experimentally by various research groups. Also in his PhD thesis, he developed a formula for the shear modulus of colloidal nanomaterials, which has been confirmed experimentally in great detail.
In 2020 he discovered and mathematically predicted that the low-frequency shear modulus of confined liquids scales with inverse cubic power of the confinement size.
In 2017 he was listed as one of the 37 most influential researchers worldwide by the journal Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research published by the American Chemical Society. In 2020 he was listed among the Emerging Leaders by the Journal of Physics published by the Institute of Physics.
As of October 2023, he has published well over 150 articles in peer-reviewed journals, h-index=40.
In 2021 he led a team that theoretically predicted and computationally discovered well-defined topological defects as mediators of plasticity in amorphous solids. This discovery has been later successfully confirmed independently by a research group led by Wei-Hua Wang and Walter Kob.
In January 2022 he proposed an approximate solution for the random close packing problem in 2D and 3D, which received multiple comments online.

Awards and honors

Selected publications

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