
University of Melbourne
Encourages students to keep striving for excellence.
Inspires growth and curiosity in every student.
A true role model for academic success.
A true expert who inspires confidence.
Great Professor!
Professor Kenneth Crozier holds the position of Professor of Physics and Electronic Engineering at the University of Melbourne, with a joint appointment between the School of Physics in the Faculty of Science and the Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering. He is also Deputy Director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Transformative Meta-Optical Systems (TMOS). Crozier completed his undergraduate studies at the University of Melbourne, earning degrees in Electrical Engineering—with first-class honours and the L.R. East Medal awarded by the Institute of Engineers Australia for being the top engineering student—and Physics. He then pursued graduate studies at Stanford University, where he received an MSEE in 1999 and a PhD in Electrical Engineering in 2003, followed by a postdoctoral fellowship. In 2004, he joined the faculty at Harvard University as an Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and was promoted to Associate Professor and holder of the John Loeb Associate Professorship in the Natural Sciences in 2008. In 2014, supported by a VESKI Innovation Fellowship and an ARC Future Fellowship, he returned to Australia to take up his current position.
Crozier's research specializations encompass nano- and micro-optics, with particular emphasis on plasmonics for applications in surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy and optical forces, optofluidics, and semiconducting nanowires. His group develops advanced optical technologies for imaging, sensing, and lab-on-a-chip devices, including plasmonic nanotweezers and metasurfaces. Notable publications include "Optical confinement within a single nanometer-scale aperture" (Journal of Applied Physics, 2003), which has garnered over 600 citations; "Quantum mechanical limit to plasmonic enhancement as observed by surface-enhanced Raman scattering" (Nature Communications, 2014); and "Filter-Free Image Sensor Pixels Comprising Silicon Nanowires with Selective Color Absorption" (Nano Letters, 2014). Among his major awards are the National Science Foundation CAREER Award (2008), the Loeb Chair at Harvard (2008), the VESKI Innovation Fellowship (2014), and the ARC Future Fellowship (2014). A Senior Member of the IEEE, Optical Society (OSA), and SPIE, Crozier holds 12 patents and has supervised numerous PhD students and postdocs who have advanced to prominent academic and industry roles. His research has attracted thousands of citations and significantly impacts the fields of photonics and nanotechnology.
Professional Email: kenneth.crozier@unimelb.edu.au