Tiffany Walsh
veski innovation fellow
Professor Tiffany Walsh is returning to Victoria after an impressive career in the UK to work at Deakin University’s Institute for Frontier Materials at Geelong’s Waurn Ponds campus.
Professor Walsh took up her veski innovation fellowship in early 2012.
Aiding developments in advanced materials with molecular simulation Research
Project description:
Nature is able to manufacture strong and durable materials such as teeth, shells and bone using non-toxic ingredients like chalk and water. Professor Tiffany Walsh will use molecular simulations to see how nature manufactures these materials at the molecular level. The aim of her research is to learn nature’s approach to manufacturing, paving the way for manufacturers to make multi-functional and high-performance materials in a similar way.
Professor Walsh will establish a team at the Institute of Frontier Materials at Deakin University’s Geelong Campus to undertake world-leading research. Using the advanced capabilities of the new Victorian Life Sciences Computational Initiative’s (VLSCI) super computers, Tiffany will aim to identify nature’s methods and relate them to future bio-inspired manufacturing approaches.
Her research will also open up new areas of biotechnology to deliver solutions and advances in areas such as personalised healthcare that are both commercially viable and socially useful.
- Described as a 'modern chemist' by Professor Peter Hodgson
- Won a Cambridge Commonwealth Trust Scholarship
- Co-led a successful application for a £5.3million Programme Grant from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, and won industrial funding for a post-doctoral researcher from Unilever, UK.

veski fellows in the news
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Prof Benjamin Marsland World’s first study of infant and new born airways microbiome throws light on origins of asthma
16 Nov 2018 | Scitech Europa
Prof Pierluigi Mancarella Awarded the prestigious international Newton Prize 2018 by the Royal Society.
“Understanding ‘friendly microbes’ may well hold the key to preventing allergic diseases including asthma.”
Professor Benjamin Marsland
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