Radenka Maric, Ph.D.
University President
- Storrs CT UNITED STATES
Dr. Maric researches novel materials for fuel cell & battery manufacturing, nanomaterials, sensors, hydrogen generation & biofuels.
Contact More Open optionsBiography
Dr. Radenka Maric was named UConn's 17th University President in September 2022. Dr. Maric’s research interests include the effect of structure, defects, and microstructure on transport and electrical properties of surfaces and interfaces. In particular, she is interested in developing novel materials for fuel cells, batteries and biosensors, durability study, any of the shortcomings of traditional vapor deposition techniques while yielding equal or better quality coatings at a lower cost. RSDT not only provides high quality active films/coatings (e.g., catalysts/electrodes/ thermal barriers coating), it also reduces the manpower, energy consumption and a number of processing steps required to assemble these films. More specifically, RSDT combines materials synthesis and deposition into a single step with several control features, replacing at least five unit operations in a conventional electrode manufacturing scheme. performance and life prognosis, aging, material state changes, and long term behavior. She developed the Reactive Spray Deposition Technology (RSDT), a thin-film deposition process.
Areas of Expertise
Education
University of Kyoto
Ph.D.
Accomplishments
University President
2022-09-28
Dr. Maric was selected as the University of Connecticut's 17th President by the Board of Trustees on September 28, 2022.
Interim President, University of Connecticut
2022-01-26
Radenka Maric, a distinguished UConn faculty member who has led UConn’s surging research enterprise to new heights as an administrator, was named UConn’s new interim president.
UConn Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor
2021-04-28
The University's most prestigious faculty title, candidates must excel in all three areas of research, teaching, and public engagement.
Links
Social
Media
Media Appearances
Diverse Leadership: Radenka Maric
Hartford Business Journal online
2023-01-23
Radenka Maric rose up the ranks at the University of Connecticut, going from a member of the School of Engineering faculty in 2010, to being named interim president and then permanent president in September 2022. Maric, a 56-year-old Bosnia native, is an experienced researcher and was a leader of UConn’s research enterprise, which raised $308.1 million in fiscal year 2022.
New UConn president Radenka Maric is fueling a leap into a clean-energy future
Connecticut Magazine print
2022-12-21
With her corkscrew curls, dressed in white and sporting blazing-white, UConn-branded sneakers, Radenka Maric seems to glow as morning sunlight illuminates her Gulley Hall office on the sparkling autumn day we meet for an interview. Like a “tell” in a poker game, the University of Connecticut’s new president reveals her cards as we settle into comfortable sofas: Our interview couldn’t begin until I agreed to let her properly welcome me by serving coffee, tea or water. Maric may be an internationally recognized expert in clean energy, but she’s powered by the fuel cell of a soul with a European sensibility.
Hydrogen Fuel Cell technology in trucks and cars; could it be coming to CT?
WTNH - Channel 8 tv
2022-05-11
Connecticut recently passed the Clean Air Act. Our state will have the same zero-emission standards by 2030 as California, where these vehicles are exclusively sold. President Rademka Maric from UConn says meeting those standards will involve more than hydrogen fuel cells. “Alternatives are going to be a mixed portfolio. It will be an electric car, it will be a fuel cell car, it will be offshore wind, it will be solar and integration of the technologies,” Maric said.
Inside UConn’s increased focus on encouraging entrepreneurial students
Westchester and Fairfield County Business Journals online
2022-04-04
According to UConn’s Interim President Radenka Maric, this focus on entrepreneurship puts the school ahead of its academic competition. “I think it’s important because this is what the future generations want,” she explained. “We see a significant number of students, both undergraduate and graduate, who are starting companies. The demand is shifting — they are not looking for the existing jobs anymore, but they are looking at how to create a new job and how to start new businesses.”
Pushing to compete nationally, UConn secures record-high research funding
Hartford Courant print
2021-09-23
UConn researchers won a total of $375.6 million in new awards in the 2020-21 fiscal year, which ended June 30, well exceeding last year’s then-record of $285.8 million, the university announced Wednesday. Raising research funding levels to nationally competitive levels has been a top goal of university officials in recent years. “UConn puts a great deal of attention and work into the support and cultivation of its research, and we have many reasons to be optimistic based on our trajectory in recent years that this growth is a trend that will continue,” Radenka Maric, UConn’s Vice President for Research, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship, said in a statement.
'A very nurturing environment': UConn aims to fuel economic growth with Stamford startup incubator
Hearst Connecticut Media print
2021-03-07
Last year, the TIP companies raised nearly $463 million in total funding. At the end of the past fiscal year, those firms cumulatively had 208 full-time and part-time positions on their payrolls. “The incubators are important spaces that can help regional economic development,” said Radenka Maric, UConn’s vice president for research, innovation and entrepreneurship. “It’s not only by launching companies around the university’s intellectual property, but also providing startups with access to institutional resources like infrastructure and access to people that can accelerate their success.”
How Green Are Electric Vehicles?
New York Times print
2021-03-02
Experts point out that spent batteries contain valuable metals and other materials that can be recovered and reused. Depending on the process used, battery recycling can also use large amounts of water, or emit air pollutants. “The percentage of lithium batteries being recycled is very low, but with time and innovation, that’s going to increase,” said Radenka Maric, a professor at the University of Connecticut’s Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering.
The Big Question with Radenka Maric: On the Role of Scientists in Society
Scientific Inquirer online
2020-10-08
Dr. Radenka Maric is the Vice President for Research, Innovation and Entrepreneurship and CT Clean Energy Fund Professor of Sustainable Energy in the Department of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering and the Department of Material Science & Engineering at the University of Connecticut and UConn Health, with responsibility for research leadership and technology commercialization of one of the top twenty-five public research universities in the United States, including its academic medical center. Dr. Maric graciously agreed to share her thoughts regarding SCINQ’s Big Question.
Maric leads UConn’s research, innovation and entrepreneurship
Hartford Business Journal online
2020-04-06
As an engineer, Radenka Maric has seen her work incorporated into cutting-edge car engines that tap into hydrogen fuel cells for power. As a senior executive at the University of Connecticut, Maric has seen her work both in the institution’s burgeoning research portfolio and the proud faces of graduating undergraduate and graduate students.
New Drug Delivery System Targets Diseases at a Genetic Level
Technology Networks online
2017-12-06
"There is no question that joining forces with industry partners to leverage our unique resources and expertise helps transform discoveries from an invention to an innovation that benefits society," says Radenka Maric, UConn's vice president for research. "We're committed to continuing to foster an entrepreneurial and industry-aware culture at the University to ensure UConn research has a positive impact on the health of Connecticut's citizens, as well as our economy."
Researcher, Painter, Pianist, Seamstress: The Many Shades of Radenka Maric
Hartford Courant print
2017-10-29
To begin to describe Radenka Maric would already be to fail; if there is a single thread that runs through her life, it would be her belief that humans cannot be reduced to anything so singular. Maric is an administrator, engineer, painter, pianist, clothier and amateur chef. She was born in the former Yugoslavia, educated in Japan and is now based in Storrs, where she arrived in 2010 as a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering. Last summer Maric, 51, was appointed as UConn’s vice president for academic research, charged with UConn's $260 million in research enterprise funds.
In budget talks, professors’ workloads become an issue
CT Post
2017-10-21
Tom Ebaugh, working toward a Ph.D. in chemical engineering, says Radenka Maric is the reason he’s doing it at the University of Connecticut. “I wouldn’t be here if she wasn’t,” said Ebaugh, 24, wearing plastic gloves and protective glasses at a fuel cell energy laboratory, part of UConn’s Center for Clean Energy Engineering. Originally from Pennsylvania, he is among a handful of graduate students working under Maric, who is not only a professor in sustainable energy, but as of July, vice president of academic research at Connecticut’s flagship university.
New Florescent Dyes Could Help Doctors Image and Diagnose Diseases
Futurism
2017-09-17
The research team’s next steps will take this innovative design and run with it — hopefully making the method and VSD commercially available. As stated by Radenka Maric, UConn’s vice president for research, “Dr. Loew’s experience is a prime example of how the NSF I-Corp program can transform high-potential academic discoveries into viable products and services … Accelerate UConn helps our preeminent faculty move their ideas beyond the lab so they can join the ranks of other successful entrepreneurs and industry leaders, and have an impact in our communities and on the economy.”
Articles
Pathways to ultra-low platinum group metal catalyst loading in proton exchange membrane electrolyzers
Catalysis TodayRadenka Maric, et al.
2016 Hydrogen is one of the world's most important chemicals, with global production of about 50 billion kg/year. Currently, hydrogen is mainly produced from fossil fuels such as natural gas and coal, producing CO2. Water electrolysis is a promising technology for fossil-free, CO2-free hydrogen production...
A Study on Reactive Spray Deposition Technology Processing Parameters in the Context of Pt Nanoparticle Formation
Journal of Thermal Spray TechnologyJustin M. Roller and Radenka Maric
2015 Catalytic materials are complex systems in which achieving the desired properties (i.e., activity, selectivity and stability) depends on exploiting the many degrees of freedom in surface and bulk composition, geometry, and defects. Flame aerosol synthesis is a process for producing nanoparticles with ample processing parameter space to tune the desired properties. Flame dynamics inside the reactor are determined by the input process variables such as solubility of precursor in the fuel; solvent boiling point; reactant flow rate and concentration; flow rates of air, fuel and the carrier gas; and the burner geometry...