Martina Stenzel


Martina Heide Stenzel is an Australian chemist. She is a Professor in the Department of Chemistry at the University of New South Wales. She is also a Royal Australian Chemical Institute University Ambassador. She became editor for the Australian Journal of Chemistry in 2008 and has served as Scientific Editor and as of 2021, as Editorial Board Chair of RSC Materials Horizons.
Stenzel studies polymer synthesis and applications of polymers in medicine, particularly the use of nanoparticles for drug delivery. She attempts to understand relationships between the structure of polymers and their properties.
Stenzel was the first woman to be awarded the Liversidge Medal by the Royal Society of New South Wales, in the medal's 88 year history.

Education

Stenzel studied chemistry at the University of Bayreuth in Germany. After completing a master's degree in science, she continued her postgraduate studies at the Institute of Applied Macromolecular Chemistry at the University of Stuttgart. In 1999, Stenzel completed her PhD thesis on Synthesis and Characterization Cu containing polyurethanes for the application as a carrier membrane for the separation of ethylene from gas mixtures.

Career

Stenzel then moved to Australia to take up a postdoctoral fellows position at the UNESCO Centre for Membrane Science and Technology, at the University of New South Wales.
She became a lecturer there in 2002.
She won an ARC Future Fellowship in 2009 and became a Full Professor as of 2012. She was promoted to co-director of the Centre for Advanced Macromolecular Design in 2013. In 2014, Stenzel joined the School of Chemistry at UNSW to build a research program focusing on polymeric nanomaterials and biomaterials.

Research

Stenzel's research interests have shifted from pure polymer synthesis to the application of polymers in biomedicine particularly drug delivery.
Stenzel studies the use of nanoparticles to administer therapeutic drugs, developing a toolset for the design of very small nanoparticles. She attempts to understand relationships between the structure of polymers and their properties. Her work has implications for nanomedicine, catalysis and biosensors.
Stenzel has authored over 385 journal articles.

Awards