Dr. Claudia Ojeda-Aristizabal

January 2025 Snapshot
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Ojeda-Aristizabal lab group
Dr. Claudia Ojeda-Aristizabal and her lab, the Nanoelectronics Group.

Physics and Astronomy Department Associate Professor Dr. Claudia Ojeda-Aristizabal and her student researchers study how electrons travel through materials with exotic properties in her lab, the Nanoelectronics Group.

Using techniques like low-temperature electronic transport and angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES), CSULB students are unveiling new phenomena and using physics to describe them. Not only do research students work with a variety of in-house equipment, like a closed cycle cryostat and scanning electron microscopes, Dr. Ojeda-Aristizabal regularly brings students to UC Berkeley to work with their state-of-the-art synchrotron.

Understanding how electrons respond to different materials has the potential to make major impacts on current and future technology, such as quantum computing and low-energy-consumption microdevices. Students in Dr. Ojeda-Aristizabal's lab also travel the country, recently presenting at the University of Chicago and Cornell University, visiting labs at MIT and OSU and participating in trainings at UCLA.

Learn more about Dr. Claudia Ojeda-Aristizabal and her work.

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Movindu Dissanayake
Undergraduate student Movindu Kawshan Dissanayake performing a sample of stacked 2-dimensional quantum materials.
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Phillip Gibbs and probes
Graduate student Phillip Gibbs with one of the probes for electronic transport measurements.
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Chenchu Yakasiri and Joshua Luna
Undergraduate students Chenchu Yakasiri and Joshua Luna manipulating and looking for small two-dimensional quantum materials on a silicon wafer under the optical microscope.
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Stefan Lucero and Movindu Dissanayake
Undergraduate students Stefan Lucero and Movindu Kawshan Dissanayake looking at the outcome of the just fabricated devices.
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Phillip Gibbs and the cryostat
Graduate student Phillip Gibbs checking one of the valves in the closed cycle cryostat.
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Anise Mansour and Dr. Claudia Ojeda-Aristizabal
Anise Mansour and Dr. Claudia Ojeda-Aristizabal checking the data of the most recent electronic transport measurements on a heterostructure of quantum materials.