Kimani Toussaint | |
Birth Name: | Kimani Christopher Toussaint |
Birth Place: | Philadelphia |
Workplaces: | University of Chicago University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Massachusetts Institute of Technology Brown University |
Alma Mater: | Boston University University of Pennsylvania |
Thesis Title: | Quantum ellipsometry |
Thesis Url: | https://worldcat.org/en/title/174964716 |
Thesis Year: | 2004 |
Awards: | National Science Foundation CAREER Award (2010) |
Kimani Christopher Toussaint, Jr. is an American engineer who is a professor and senior associate dean in the School of Engineering at Brown University. His research considers the development of quantitative nonlinear optical imaging methods and advanced optical techniques for nanotechnology, and the characterization of plasmonic nanostructure. He is a Fellow of Optica.
Toussaint is from Philadelphia.[1] He became interested in physics as a child.[2] Toussaint studied physics and African American Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, where he met Anthony Garito, a professor who introduced him to optics and engineering. In his physics classes, he was one of the only African American students. He moved to Boston University for his graduate research, where he specialized in electrical engineering. His doctoral research explored quantum ellipsometry of semiconductors.[3] At Boston, he was awarded a Gates Millennium Fellowship, which supported his graduate program.
After his PhD, Toussaint was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Chicago, where he worked on superresolution optical microscopy, optical tweezing of nanoparticles, and polarization control.[4] [5]
Toussaint was appointed to the faculty at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2007. His research exploits various properties of light, including angular momentum, linear momentum and other polarization degrees of freedom. He is interested in the realization of bioimaging techniques to better understand biological tissue and disease.[6] To this end, he developed an imaging platform that combines second-harmonic generation imaging with confocal microscopy and Mueller matrix polarimetry. Alongside bioimaging, Toussaint has developed nano antennas to exploit near-field optics.
In 2014, Toussaint worked as a Martin Luther King Jr. Visiting associate professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and worked with Peter So.[7] In Fall 2019, Toussaint joined the faculty at Brown University, and by 2020 he was made a Senior Associate Dean of the School of Engineering.[8] [9] He leads the Photonics Research of Bio/Nano Environments (PROBE) laboratory[10] and is Senior Associate Dean in the School of Engineering.[11] He is part of the National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center in Cellular Metamaterials.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, it emerged that pulse oximeters were less effective on Black patients. This is because melanin absorbs light, making pulse oximeters overestimate the level of oxygen in a patient's blood.[12] In response, Toussaint started to develop a new, more equitable device.[13] In an interview with Optica, Toussaint said that the pandemic changed his perspective of where his research could have the largest societal impact.[14]
Toussaint is a Fellow of SPIE[15] and Optica. Other awards and honors include:
His publications include