QRISE Center

MTSU’s Dr. John Villanova Selected for Prestigious National KITP Scholar Award

Title-JV KITP

Dr. John Villanova (MTSU Physics and Astronomy) has been selected as a KITP Scholar 2026-2028, one of only six to eight faculty members chosen nationwide each year.

As part of this highly competitive program, Dr. Villanova will collaborate with leading physicists at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara-one of the world’s premier centers for theoretical physics. This distinction places Villanova among an elite group of physicist-educators and researchers and provides sustained access to one of the world’s most influential centers for theoretical physics.

What is the KITP Scholar Award

The KITP Scholar Award is a nationally competitive fellowship designed to support physics faculty at emerging research and teaching-intensive universities, institutions that often lack the large-scale research infrastructure of major R1 universities. Founded in 1979, the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics is internationally recognized as a premier hub for theoretical physics. Each year, hundreds of scientists from around the world participate in KITP research programs spanning astrophysics, condensed matter physics, particle physics, quantum information science, and related fields. The institute is supported by the National Science Foundation and the Kavli Foundation.

Why this Matters for MTSU

Dr. Greg Van Patten
Dr. Greg Van Patten, chemistry professor, Dean, College of Basic and Applied Sciences

Dean of CBAS, MTSU, Greg Van Patten noted: “Dr. Villanova’s selection for the Kavli Institute award is further evidence that the research excellence and contributions of MTSU faculty are being recognized at the forefront of quantum science in the United States and around the world.

Villanova’s selection validates MTSU’s strategic investment in quantum science and interdisciplinary research.

Dr. Ron Henderson
Dr. Ron Henderson Chair of Physics and Astronomy Department, MTSU

For institutions like MTSU, the state’s largest public R2 university, national awards of this caliber carry outsized significance. MTSU is actively building research capacity, visibility, and expertise, and programs like the KITP Scholar Award are designed to accelerate that growth by providing faculty with dedicated time and access to high research environments.

Ron Henderson, Chair of the Department of Physics and Astronomy said: “Being awarded one of the eight KITP Scholar Awards nationwide is very prestigious and will enable him to be successful for NSF or DOE grants.  Dr. Villanova has only been at MTSU for 16 months and yet has already made remarkable contributions to the QRISE center.

Villanova’s extended visits to KITP will also place him near the NSF Quantum Foundry at UC Santa Barbara, a next-generation materials research center focused on developing materials with unprecedented quantum coherence and training the future quantum workforce. This proximity creates a natural bridge for collaboration between MTSU’s QRISE Center and world-class quantum materials initiatives.

QRISE Center and the Quantum Future

Hanna Terletska, QRISE
Dr. Hanna Terletska, Director, MTSU QRISE Center.

Villanova’s KITP recognition comes at a pivotal moment for MTSU. In October 2025, the university launched the QRISE Center (Quantum Research, Interdisciplinary Science, and Education)  to advance quantum research, education, and workforce development across disciplines.

His work exemplifies the type of research QRISE aims to support. “New and complex materials are how scientists harness the most exciting properties of quantum physics to build advanced technologies,” Villanova said. “Students need the skills to contribute to these developments, which will have impact across the entire nation.”

Notably, Villanova is only the second MTSU faculty member to be named a KITP Scholar. Dr. Hanna Terletska, Director of the QRISE Center, previously held the KITP distinction during the 2017–2019 cohort. Terletska emphasized the broader impact of this award for MTSU and QRISE: “As associate director of research for QRISE, Dr. Villanova’s work at KITP will directly advance MTSU’s research in theoretical and computational quantum materials. The sustained collaborations he develops at KITP will strengthen the university’s research profile and deepen its engagement with the national theoretical physics community.

Villanova’s Research: From ORNL to MTSU’s QRISE Center

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Villanova’s research trajectory includes experience at one of the nation’s premier national laboratories. After earning his Ph.D. in theoretical condensed matter physics from Virginia Tech in 2018, he served as a postdoctoral research associate at University of Arkansas and then in the Nanomaterials Theory Institute at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the U.S. Department of Energy’s largest science and energy laboratory and home to the Quantum Science Center, one of five National Quantum Information Science Research Centers.

His research focuses on density functional theory and computational approaches to quantum materials, including topological kagome systems, quantum spin liquids, Weyl and Dirac semimetals, two-dimensional ferroelectrics, and spin-wave physics in van der Waals antiferromagnets.

Villanova is also one of the principal investigators on TN-QuMat (Tennessee Quantum Materials Workforce Development and Training), a $2.2 million Department of Energy initiative partnering MTSU with ORNL, Tennessee State University, Fisk University, and Meharry Medical College. He leads the topological materials simulation thrust, training students in computational techniques that bridge experiments and theory.