Delia Milliron
Delia J. Milliron is the T. Brockett Hudson Professor in Chemical Engineering at the University of Texas at Austin. Milliron leads a research team that focuses on developing and studying the properties of new electronic nanomaterials. Her team pursues studies on nanocrystals, nanoscale interfaces, and controlled assemblies of nanocrystals. Her team takes a systematic approach towards elucidating effects that arise at the nanoscale with a special focus on structure-property relationships.
Among many other topics, she is well known for her discoveries leading to development and innovation of technologies in the energy sciences. For her development of energy-efficient "smart window" coating technologies, Milliron is the co-founder and chief scientific officer of Heliotrope Technologies.
Research and career
Delia Milliron received her A.B. in Chemistry and Materials Science and Engineering from Princeton University where she performed undergraduate research with Jeffrey Schwartz and Antoine Kahn. During her undergraduate research experiences, Milliron established an early publication record on techniques and topics spanning from magnetic force microscopy to polymer cross-linking. Milliron would go on to receive her Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from UC Berkeley in the laboratory of Paul Alivisatos where her thesis was on "New materials for nanocrystal solar cells". Milliron's research during her early career was distinguished by studies on shape control of nanomaterials, charge transfer, and preparation of hybrid nanocrystal-polymer photovoltaic cells.After graduate school, Milliron held a post-doctoral research position at the IBM T.J. Watson Research Cente
Milliron and her research group moved to UT Austin in 2014. In addition to her current faculty appointment at UT Austin, Milliron is a co-principal investigator for the Center for Dynamics and Control of Materials a National Science Foundation Materials Research [Science and Engineering Centers|Materials Research Science and Engineering Center]. As part of the MRSEC, Milliron is also the faculty co-leader for the internal research group on "Reconfigurable and Porous Nanoparticle Networks". In July 2025, Milliron was appointed the department chair of Chemical Engineering at University of Michigan.
Notable publications and patents
Milliron has been prolific in her publication record and also in technology impact of her research which has led to over 17 patents. Listed below are some of her notable publications:Awards
- Edith and Peter O'Donnell Award in Engineering, The Academy of Medicine, Engineering and Science of Texas
- Norman Hackerman Award in Chemical Research, The Welch Foundation
- Sloan Research Fellow, Sloan Foundation
- Resonante Award Winner, Resnick Sustainability Institute Caltech
- DOE Early Career Research Program Awardee for "Inorganic nanocomposite electrodes for electrochemical energy storage and energy conversion"
- R&D 100 Award for Universal Smart Windows
- ~$3M ARPA-E Award for "Low-Cost Solution Processed Universal Smart Window Coatings"
- Mohr Davidow Ventures Innovators Award, CITRIS and the Banatao Institute
- R&D 100 Award for Nanocrystal Solar Cells