Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering

Dr. Marc Birtwistle Featured in AIChE’s “Revisiting the Future of Chemical Engineering” Series

For the American Institute of Chemical Engineer’s 110 year celebration, they launched a blog series titled, “Revisiting the Future of Chemical Engineering” to commemorate how much the field has changed and how much it will continue to evolve. The series features 29 blogs written by leaders in academia, industry, and government (national laboratories). Each post consists of an interview-style article where the professional describes how they believe chemical engineering will change in the next 25 years.

ChBE’s Dr. Marc Birtwistle is featured in the series. Dr. Birtwistle was previously featured by AIChE in 2008 in a similar campaign for their 100 year celebration. The article compares his 2008 comments to his current thoughts about the future of chemical engineering.

Read Dr. Birtwistle’s article here: https://www.aiche.org/chenected/2018/10/marc-birtwistle-clemson-university-future-chemical-engineering.

Nov. 29, 2018- ChBE Seminar Speaker- Dr. Christopher E. Wilmer, Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, University of Pittsburgh

The Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering welcomes Dr. Christopher E. Wilmer, an assistant professor in the Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering at the University of Pittsburgh where he directs the Hypothetical Materials Lab. The lab’s research focuses on advanced uses of porous crystals, such as in developing artificial noses or storing oxygen.

His seminar titled, “Understanding Thermal Transport in Porous Crystals” will take place on Thursday, November 29 from 2:00-3:00pm in Earle 100.

Highly porous materials are very useful for chemical separations, catalysis, and gas storage. The last twenty years has been particularly exciting in this area because of the discovery of highly porous crystals called metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). By changing the building blocks used in their self-assembly, their pore structures can be tuned to target specific applications, and in two decades, over 70,000 different MOFs have been reported in the literature.

However, an important property for the practical implementation of MOFs as industrial adsorbents has received relatively little attention over that time: thermal transport. Whenever gases are rapidly loaded and unloaded in porous materials, there is a sharp increase and decrease of temperature. In just the last few years, understanding of thermal transport in porous crystals, and MOFs in particular, has increased significantly. Through molecular simulations, we have investigated the thermal conductivity of MOFs both as a function of their pore structure and also as function of gas loading [1-2]. An important observation of the Hypothetical Materials Lab, which is contested and for which experimental support is scarce, is that thermal conductivity of MOFs generally decreases in the presence of adsorbed gases [3]. This observation, if found to be hold as a general phenomenon, implies greater challenges for MOFs as gas adsorbents: not only are they typically insulating materials to begin with, but their insulating nature is exacerbated by the presence of gases. In this talk, Dr. Wilmer presents his collected evidence on this important phenomenon and outline potential strategies to control and mitigate unwanted thermal effects in gas adsorption scenarios.

Dr. Wilmer received his B.A.Sc. degree from the University of Toronto’s Engineering Science’s Nanoengineering program. While pursuing a Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering at Northwestern under the mentorship of Prof. Randall Q. Snurr, he took an interest in the American way of developing new technologies—through entrepreneurship. While still a student, he co-founded, NuMat Technologies, which develops commercial gas storage solutions using MOFs, for which he was named to the Forbes Top 30-Under-30 list in Energy Innovation. The Hypothetical Materials Lab he directs at the University of Pittsburgh recently spun-out Aeronics, which manufactures inexpensive oxygen storage containers for people with decreased lung function.

ChBE Undergraduate Featured in Chemical and Engineering News Magazine

Deidra Ward featured in C&EN Magazine

ChBE senior Deidra Ward was recently featured in the November 5th edition of Chemical and Engineering News Magazine (C&EN). The article titled, “Diversity in Focus at NOBCChE,” highlighted her experience at the National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists & Chemical Engineers (NOBCChE) annual conference. Deidra is the president of Clemson University’s NOBCChE student chapter, which was founded earlier this year. She attended the conference in September with other Clemson NOBCChE chapter executive officers.

Clemson NOBCChE student chapter executive officers attending the annual NOBCChE conference in September

The article discusses Deidra’s career aspirations and features her poster on polymer formulations for bioadhesives that she presented at the conference.

Read more about Deidra and NOBCChE here: https://cen.acs.org/careers/diversity/NOBCChE-meeting-students-professionals-forge/96/i44.

Sallye Gathmann Wins Awards at AIChE Annual Conference

The American Institute of Engineers (AIChE) presented Sallye Gathmann with the 2017-2018 Donald F. & Mildred Topp Othmer Scholarship Award at their annual conference in Pittsburgh, PA during the Student Awards Ceremony on Sunday, October 28. Sallye was nominated by the Clemson University AIChE Student Chapter to receive this honor. The scholarship of $1,000 is a competitive award only given to 15 AIChE Student Members from around the country annually based on academic achievement and student chapter involvement.

Sallye was also recognized at the conference for winning second place for the Separations category in the 2018 Undergraduate Student Poster Competition. Her poster was titled, “Ultrapure Lignin via Liquid-Lignin Lignin-Solvent Systems: Phase Behavior & Characterization.” She is advised by Dr. Mark Thies.

The Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering would like to congratulate Sallye on her achievements!

 

ChBE Graduate Students Win 2018 Three Minute Thesis Competition

James Foster and Joshua Osuofa both won first place in their categories at the 2018 3MT competition.

Graduate students from the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering won first place in both categories at Clemson University’s Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition on Nov. 2.

Joshua Osuofa won the graduate student category for his presentation, “Filters for faster production of Biologics,” and James Foster won the PhD candidate category for his presentation, “Innovative Materials for the Screening of Plutonium in Water Sources.” Dr. Scott Husson advises both students.

James will go on to represent Clemson at the February 2019 Conference of Southern Graduate Schools (CSGS) 3MT competition in Knoxville, TN.

3MT is a research communication competition that gives higher degree students just three minutes to present their work and its significance without using jargon to a non-specialist audience. This year, more than 50 students representing all colleges at the university participated in the competition.

Joshua Osuofa won the graduate student category for his presentation, “Filters for faster production of Biologics.”
James Foster won the PhD candidate category for his presentation, “Innovative Materials for the Screening of Plutonium in Water Sources.”