PhD Student, PMRF Fellow

Pallavi spends her days (and sometimes nights) working in class 100 and 1000 cleanrooms (because dust is our enemy) mastering high-tech wizardry like optical lithography, e-beam lithography, dry/wet etching, substrate cleaning, and thin-film deposition. Basically, if it involves making tiny, high-performance devices, she is on it. Her research is about developing next-gen molecular memristive and memcapacitive devices for AI. The goal? Revolutionizing AI hardware so that it can run at the edge, consume less power, and still be incredibly powerful. If all goes well, this tech won’t just change computing—it could reshape economies, enhance security, and, who knows, maybe even give your laptop a break from overheating. No pressure, right?

Previous Credentials

•MTech.(Materials Science Centre, Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, West Bengal, India)
•M.Sc.(Physics, Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Gorakhpur University, Uttar Pradesh, India)