Research interests

I received my bachelor's and Master's degrees in Mechanical Engineering from Amirkabir University of Technology (Tehran Polytechnic) and Sharif University of Technology (SUT) respectively. Having been graduated, I spent two years in Soft Condensed Matter group at Physics department of SUT, working on the conformations and structures of confined DNA and chromatin. Simultaneously, I had been a researcher at the school of Mathematics in Institute for Research in Fundamental Sciences (IPM) studying the neural fields and network dynamics. In July 2012, as a guest student, I attended the Theoretical Soft Matter and Biophysics department (ICS-2) of Forschungszentrum Julich to study the dynamics of Von Willebrand factor in the shear flow. In March 2013, I have been admitted to Master program in Bioengineering in University of California, Berkeley and as a member of the Molecular Cell Biomechanics laboratory, I focused on the dynamics of globular polymers within the shear flows and their collective motions on an adhesive surface. In April 2015, I was admitted to Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research as a PhD student. Being funded by DFG, my PhD career is mainly focused on the adaptive resolution methods (H-AdResS) for molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulations and their applications on the soft matters. With the aid of such methodology, one is able to implement the molecular dynamics simulations at the different time and length scales simultaneously and traces the underlying dynamics more efficiently.

Curriculum Vitae

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Publications