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Chetan Dhital is an Associate Professor of Physics in the Department of Physics at Kennesaw State University, a position he has held since 2018, advancing from Assistant Professor. He earned his PhD in Physics from Boston College in 2014, with a dissertation titled 'Combined Transport, Magnetization and Neutron Scattering Study of Correlated Iridates and Iron Pnictide Superconductors' under the supervision of Dr. Stephen D. Wilson. Earlier, he received an MS in Physics from Tribhuvan University in Nepal in 2005 and a BS in Physical Science from the same university in 1999. Following his doctorate, Dhital served as a Postdoctoral Associate at Oak Ridge National Laboratory from 2014 to 2015 and at Louisiana State University from 2015 to 2018. Prior to his graduate studies in the United States, he worked as a Physics Lecturer at Damak Multiple Campus in Nepal from 2005 to 2008.
An experimental condensed matter physicist, Dhital's research centers on the fundamental and technologically relevant properties of non-centrosymmetric topological magnetic materials, encompassing multiferroicity, superconductivity, magnetic skyrmions, and Weyl fermions. His methodologies include single crystal synthesis via high-temperature solid-state reactions, measurements of electrical and magnetic properties as functions of temperature and magnetic fields, and neutron and x-ray scattering experiments conducted at national facilities such as Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Dhital has co-authored key publications including 'Entropic signatures of the skyrmion lattice phase in MnSi1–xAlx and Fe1–yCoySi' (Physical Review B, 2020), 'Crystal and magnetic structure of polar oxide HoCrWO6' (Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials, 2020), 'Unpinning the skyrmion lattice in MnSi: Effect of substitutional disorder' (Physical Review B, 2019), 'Carrier localization and electronic phase separation in a doped spin-orbit-driven Mott phase in Sr3(Ir1–xRux)2O7' (Nature Communications, 2014), and 'Neutron scattering study of correlated phase behavior in Sr2IrO4' (Physical Review B, 2013). His work has accumulated approximately 1996 citations on Google Scholar. Dhital received the GMAG Outstanding Graduate Dissertation Award at the APS March Meeting in 2014 and the DMP Postdoctoral Travel Award at the APS March Meeting in 2018. In 2025, he was awarded a three-year, $799,934 grant from the U.S. Department of Energy in collaboration with Madalynn Marshall for energy-efficient technologies and was honored as a top researcher at Kennesaw State University's Apex Awards.

Photo by Osarugue Igbinoba on Unsplash
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