Dan T. Major
Dr. Dan Thomas Major is a professor of chemistry at Bar Ilan University, specializing in computational chemistry.
Biography
Dan Major obtained his Ph.D. from the Chemistry Department at Bar-Ilan University in 2003, followed by three years as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Minnesota working with Prof. Jiali Gao. In 2007 he moved to the Chemistry Department at Bar-Ilan University, where he is now a full professor.Scientific interests and publications
Major's research focuses on computational approaches to chemistry, biochemistry, and nanotechnology. These include the development of simulation methods, a study of enzyme reactions and protein dynamics, understanding natural product synthesis, development of protein-ligand docking programs, in silico design of Li-ion batteries, and fuel cell modeling.He develops classical and quantum simulation methods, and in particular tools for studying enzyme catalysis. This includes the development of path-integral methods for the simulations of zero-point energy and tunneling effects in condensed phase environments, methods for free energy simulations, and novel docking approaches. The simulation tools are typically used in conjunction with hybrid Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics (QM/MM) methods and have been applied to a wide range of enzymes. Enzymatic systems studied in his research group include proton and hydride transfer reactions and terpene synthases. Additionally, Prof. Major has carried out numerous studies on physical and electrochemical properties of magnesium and lithium-ion batteries and fuel cells using modern quantum chemistry tools.
Among his awards is Excellence in teaching ; Krill Prize of the Wolf Foundation ; Alon Fellowship ; Fulbright Scholarship ; Excellent young scientist from the Israeli Chemical Society.