Author Archives: Edrick Morales

Experimental and Theoretical Studies of Novel Electrocatalysts

2010 Spring Symposium

 
Jing­guang G. Chen
Cen­ter for Cat­alyt­ic Sci­ence and Tech­nol­o­gy
Depart­ment of Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing
Uni­ver­si­ty of Delaware
Newark, DE 19716


Abstract — Met­al car­bides [1–3] and bimetal­lic alloys [4–7] often show nov­el cat­alyt­ic and elec­tro­cat­alyt­ic prop­er­ties. How­ev­er, it is dif­fi­cult to know a pri­ori how the chem­i­cal prop­er­ties of par­tic­u­lar car­bide and bimetal­lic sys­tems will be mod­i­fied rel­a­tive to the par­ent met­als. In the past few years our research group has inves­ti­gat­ed the nov­el cat­alyt­ic prop­er­ties of var­i­ous car­bide and bimetal­lic sys­tems, using a com­bi­na­tion of Den­si­ty Func­tion­al The­o­ry (DFT) cal­cu­la­tions, sur­face sci­ence stud­ies on sin­gle crys­tal sur­faces, and reac­tor and fuel cell stud­ies of sup­port­ed cat­a­lysts. The gen­er­al trends from the exper­i­men­tal and the­o­ret­i­cal stud­ies of car­bide [1] and bimetal­lic sur­faces [4] have been sum­ma­rized in recent reviews.

In this talk we will describe the uti­liza­tion of tung­sten car­bides as poten­tial anode elec­tro­cat­a­lysts for Direct Methanol Fuel Cells (DMFC). Cur­rent­ly, the anode elec­tro­cat­a­lysts for DMFC are Pt and Pt/Ru, which are dis­ad­van­ta­geous in terms of the pro­hib­i­tive­ly high costs and their sus­cep­ti­bil­i­ty to be poi­soned by CO. We will describe how to con­trol the decom­po­si­tion path­ways of methanol on sin­gle crys­tal sur­faces of tung­sten car­bides under well-con­trolled ultra­high vac­u­um (UHV) con­di­tions. We will also dis­cuss the syn­the­sis of phase pure tung­sten car­bide elec­trodes using Phys­i­cal Vapor Depo­si­tion (PVD) to bridge the “mate­ri­als gap” between sin­gle crys­tal sur­faces and poly­crys­talline films. We will then present our results of the elec­tro­chem­i­cal eval­u­a­tion of the tung­sten car­bide elec­trodes to bridge the “pres­sure gap” between UHV envi­ron­ment and elec­tro­chem­i­cal con­di­tions. We will also briefly dis­cuss the ther­mo­dy­nam­ic sta­bil­i­ty and kinet­ic mea­sure­ments regard­ing the bimetal­lic sur­faces in the pres­ence of oxy­gen under both UHV [8] and atmos­pher­ic [9] con­di­tions, which should help iden­ti­fy active and sta­ble bimetal­lic cath­ode elec­tro­cat­a­lysts in the Oxy­gen Reduc­tion Reac­tion (ORR) in fuel cells.

[1] Hwu & Chen, Chem­i­cal Reviews, 105 (2005) 185–212.
[2] Na, Zhang, Zheng, Wang & Chen, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 47 (2008) 8510.
[3] Weigert, Stot­tle­my­er, Zell­ner & Chen, J. Phys. Chem. C, 111 (2007) 14617.
[4] Chen, Men­ning & Zell­ner, Sur­face Sci­ence Reports, 63 (2008) 201–254.
[5] Hwu, Eng & Chen, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 124 (2002) 702.
[6] Kitchin, Norskov, Barteau & Chen, Phys. Rev. Lett. 93 (2004) 156801.
[7] Muril­lo, Goda & Chen, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 129 (2007) 7101.
[8] Men­ning & Chen, J. Chem. Phys. 130 (2009) 174709.
[9] Men­ning & Chen, J. Pow­er Sources, 195 (2010) 3140.

Speaker’s Biog­ra­phy — Jing­guang Chen is the Claire D. LeClaire Pro­fes­sor of chem­i­cal engi­neer­ing. He also holds the posi­tions of the Inter­im Direc­tor of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Delaware Ener­gy Insti­tute and Co-Direc­tor of the Ener­gy Fron­tier Research Cen­ter at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Delaware. He received his Ph.D. degree from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Pitts­burgh 1988. He spent one year in Ger­many as a Hum­boldt Post­doc­tor­al Fel­low before start­ing his career at the Exxon Cor­po­rate Research Lab­o­ra­to­ries. In 1998 he accept­ed a fac­ul­ty posi­tion at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Delaware and served as the Direc­tor of the Cen­ter for Cat­alyt­ic Sci­ence and Tech­nol­o­gy (CCST) from 2000–2007. He has 200 jour­nal pub­li­ca­tions and 17 US patents. He is very active in serv­ing the sur­face sci­ence and catal­y­sis com­mu­ni­ties, includ­ing respon­si­bil­i­ties as the Chair for the Gor­don Research Con­fer­ence on Catal­y­sis in 2002, the Chair of the Philadel­phia Catal­y­sis Club in 2004, the Catal­y­sis Sec­re­tari­at of the Amer­i­can Chem­i­cal Soci­ety in 2007, and the Board of Direc­tors for the North Amer­i­can Catal­y­sis Soci­ety. He is also the co-founder and team leader of the first Syn­chro­tron Catal­y­sis Con­sor­tium in the US for the Depart­ment of Ener­gy.

Hydrocarbon Fuels from Biomass: Catalysis as Important as Ever!

2010 Spring Symposium

 
George J. Antos
Direc­tor, Catal­y­sis and Bio­catal­y­sis Pro­gram
Direc­torate for Engi­neer­ing
Nation­al Sci­ence Foun­da­tion



Abstract — Catal­y­sis played an impor­tant role in the devel­op­ment of the petro­le­um-derived fuel indus­try into the key part of the world­wide indus­tri­al pic­ture that it is today. For var­i­ous strate­gic rea­sons, a new fuel plat­form based on bio­mass is desired to sup­ple­ment and replace the petro­le­um of today. Corn-derived ethanol from fer­men­ta­tion was the first move­ment. Addi­tion­al tech­nol­o­gy is seen to be nec­es­sary how­ev­er. Where can we seek the tools nec­es­sary to achieve ambi­tious petro­le­um-replace­ment goals? Recent advances in catal­y­sis and bio­catal­y­sis hold great promise for new path­ways to the mass pro­duc­tion of next gen­er­a­tion hydro­car­bon bio­fu­els: green gaso­line, diesel and jet fuel from switch­grass, for­est waste, and agri­cul­tur­al residue. The poten­tial advan­tages of hydro­car­bon pro­duc­tion from lig­no­cel­lu­losic feed­stocks will be dis­cussed, and the newest process path­ways and catal­y­sis impacts will be out­lined. Com­mer­cial­iza­tion efforts will be dis­cussed. Yet gaps in knowl­edge still exist. Fed­er­al fund­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties in hydro­car­bon bio­fu­els will be touched on.

Speaker’s Biog­ra­phy — Dr. George J. Antos is cur­rent­ly the Direc­tor of the Catal­y­sis and Bio­catal­y­sis Pro­gram in the Engi­neer­ing Direc­torate at the Nation­al Sci­ence Foun­da­tion. This pro­gram receives 150–200 pro­pos­als for uni­ver­si­ty research fund­ing in fun­da­men­tal catal­y­sis, bio­catal­y­sis, bio­mass con­ver­sion, elec­tro­catal­y­sis and pho­to­catal­y­sis each year with mil­lions of dol­lars award­ed annu­al­ly. George joined NSF after a 33+ year career in indus­try with UOP LLC. This expe­ri­ence encom­passed the research, devel­op­ment and com­mer­cial­iza­tion of process, cat­a­lyst and mate­r­i­al tech­nolo­gies for the petro­le­um refin­ing and petro­chem­i­cal indus­tries. George has authored and co-authored over 160 US patents, and has develped a large num­ber of pre­sen­ta­tions and papers in the area. George is also an Adjunct Pro­fes­sor with the Chem­i­cal and Bio­log­i­cal Engi­neer­ing Depart­ment at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Wis­con­sin, Madi­son and is CEO of Cat­a­lyst Real­iza­tions, Inc., a con­sult­ing com­pa­ny. His edu­ca­tion includes a B.S. in Chem­istry from Iowa State Uni­ver­si­ty, and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Chem­istry from North­west­ern Uni­ver­si­ty.

The Outlook for Energy and Technology Implications

2010 Spring Symposium

 
Alessan­dro Fal­di
Exxon­Mo­bil Research & Engi­neer­ing Com­pa­ny
1545 Route 22 East
Annan­dale, NJ 08801
Alessandro.​Faldi@​ExxonMobil.​com



The pre­sen­ta­tion first high­lights ExxonMobil’s Out­look for Ener­gy, which reflects an assess­ment of glob­al sup­ply and demand through 2030 based on the under­ly­ing fac­tors that are shap­ing impor­tant ener­gy chal­lenges around the world. As always, the Out­look for Ener­gy focus­es on sev­er­al key areas of inter­est, which this year will include grow­ing trans­porta­tion and pow­er gen­er­a­tion demands as well as the out­look for ener­gy-relat­ed CO2 emis­sions.

Eco­nom­ic progress and grow­ing pop­u­la­tions, espe­cial­ly in devel­op­ing coun­tries, will dri­ve ener­gy demand approx­i­mate­ly 35% high­er in 2030 ver­sus 2005. This demand increase is antic­i­pat­ed despite sub­stan­tial effi­cien­cy gains, which are expect­ed to accel­er­ate as new tech­nolo­gies are devel­oped and deployed.

Ris­ing trans­porta­tion needs will increase relat­ed ener­gy require­ments approx­i­mate­ly 40% by 2030, even as light-duty vehi­cles with much bet­ter fuel econ­o­my pen­e­trate the mar­ket. The rise in trans­porta­tion demand will be met pri­mar­i­ly by oil, which will pro­vide close to 95 per­cent of all trans­porta­tion fuels in 2030.

As economies grow, glob­al demand for elec­tric­i­ty is pro­ject­ed to increase 75 per­cent by 2030. Con­sis­tent with this pro­jec­tion, ener­gy for pow­er gen­er­a­tion is expect­ed to remain the largest and fastest grow­ing seg­ment of glob­al demand, dri­ven in large part by increas­es in Asia Pacif­ic. Meet­ing the expect­ed world­wide growth in pow­er demand will require a diverse set of ener­gy sources. Today coal is dom­i­nant and will retain the largest share glob­al­ly through 2030; how­ev­er, nat­ur­al gas, nuclear, and renew­ables will all gain mar­ket share.

In the sec­ond part of my talk, I’ll describe that meet­ing this ener­gy demand requires an inte­grat­ed set of solu­tions, includ­ing expand­ing all types of sup­ply, improv­ing effi­cien­cy, and mit­i­gat­ing green­house gas emis­sions. I’ll touch on exam­ples of how tech­nol­o­gy will play a crit­i­cal role in meet­ing these chal­lenges, and dis­cuss ExxonMobil’s alliance with a lead­ing biotech com­pa­ny, Syn­thet­ic Genomics Inc., to research and devel­op next gen­er­a­tion bio­fu­els from pho­to­syn­thet­ic algae.

Speaker’s Biog­ra­phy Alessan­dro Fal­di — Alessan­dro has a Lau­rea in Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing from the Poly­tech­nic of Milan, Italy, and a Ph. D. in Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Min­neso­ta. He joined Exxon Chem­i­cal Com­pa­ny in 1994 as a research engi­neer at the Bay­town Poly­mers Cen­ter, Exxon Chem­i­cal Tech­nol­o­gy, where he held tech­ni­cal posi­tions in mate­ri­als char­ac­ter­i­za­tion, advanced char­ac­ter­i­za­tion and prod­uct devel­op­ment.

In 2000, Alessan­dro moved to Exxon­Mo­bil Chemical’s head­quar­ters in Hous­ton, Texas where he held mar­ket plan­ner and mar­ket devel­op­ment posi­tions in the Polypropy­lene busi­ness.

In 2005, Alessan­dro returned to Chemical’s Tech­nol­o­gy in Bay­town, Texas to become Pro­gram Leader of a break­through team that devel­oped advan­taged tech­nol­o­gy for Exxon­Mo­bil Chemical’s spe­cial­ty busi­ness.

In 2007, he was appoint­ed Cor­po­rate Pro­grams Port­fo­lio Man­ag­er in Cor­po­rate Strate­gic Research, Exxon­Mo­bil Research and Engi­neer­ing Com­pa­ny and is respon­si­ble for man­ag­ing emerg­ing-oppor­tu­ni­ty pro­grams that sup­port the Corporation’s gen­er­al inter­est.

Elections for the 2010-11 Season Executive Committee

Elec­tions for the 2010-11 Club Offi­cers will be held on Thurs­day, April 22 dur­ing din­ner. The can­di­dates are:

Chair-Elect: Joe Fedeyko and Roger Grey
Trea­sur­er: Ist­van Halasz and Stephen Har­ris
Direc­tors: Trap­ti Chaubey, Wei Huang, Bjorn Mod­en, Eliz­a­beth Ross-Medgaar­den and Parag Shah

Biographical sketches of the candidates

Chair-Elect

  • Joe Fedeyko – Joe is cur­rent­ly a Staff Sci­en­tist at John­son Matthey Inc., Emis­sion Con­trol Tech­nolo­gies where he devel­ops cat­a­lysts for the selec­tive cat­alyt­ic reduc­tion of NOx. He grad­u­at­ed in 2001 from Lehigh Uni­ver­si­ty with a B.S. in Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing and in 2006 from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Delaware with a Ph. D. in Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing under the advise­ment of Raul Lobo. He’s been a mem­ber of the Philadel­phia Catal­y­sis Club for the past 8 years serv­ing as a pro­gram chair (2007) and a direc­tor (2008, 2009).
  • Roger Grey – Roger Grey is a Research Sci­en­tist at Lyon­dell Chem­i­cal Com­pa­ny, where he has been employed for almost thir­ty years, cur­rent­ly work­ing in the field of oxi­da­tion catal­y­sis. Pri­or to Lyon­dell, Grey worked at Allied Chem­i­cal for five years, main­ly in the field of homo­ge­neous catal­y­sis. He received his Ph.D. in chem­istry from Michi­gan State Uni­ver­si­ty in 1973 and was a post-doc­tor­al research fel­low at UCLA for two years. Grey has been an active mem­ber of the Catal­y­sis Club of Philadel­phia for many years. He has served as Pro­gram Chair, Direc­tor, Trea­sur­er, and as Chair of the Club. He also served as a co-chair of the poster ses­sion pro­gram for the 2005 North Amer­i­can Catal­y­sis Soci­ety Meet­ing.

Trea­sur­er

  • Ist­van Halasz – Ist­van is a Prin­ci­pal Chemist at PQ Cor­po­ra­tion with a Ph. D. from the Hun­gar­i­an Acad­e­my of Sci­ences. His diverse aca­d­e­m­ic and indus­tri­al research back­ground includes prod­uct and process devel­op­ment, mate­ri­als char­ac­ter­i­za­tion, het­ero­ge­neous catal­y­sis, and sol­id state chem­istry. He has edit­ed one book and (co)authored 100 papers, 8 patents, and 63 con­fer­ence pre­sen­ta­tions. Ist­van has been an ACS and North Amer­i­can Catal­y­sis Soci­ety mem­ber since 1990, and has held var­i­ous board posi­tions at CCP includ­ing chair.
  • Stephen Har­ris – Stephen Har­ris received a BS in chem­istry from Muh­len­berg Col­lege and a Ph.D. in phys­i­cal organ­ic chem­istry from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Rochester. His inter­ests are in process design and opti­miza­tion using homo­ge­neous and het­ero­ge­neous cat­a­lysts and dif­fer­en­tial sep­a­ra­tion tech­nolo­gies. He has been Trea­sur­er, Arrange­ments Chair, and Mem­ber­ship Direc­tor for the CCP.

Direc­tors

  • Trap­ti Chaubey – Trap­ti Chaubey earned her M.S. in Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing from Illi­nois Insti­tute of Tech­nol­o­gy. Dur­ing her Master’s she worked with Dr. Hamid Aras­toopour on recy­cling waste rub­ber using Sol­id State Shear Extru­sion process. She joined Air Liq­uide in 2004 and has worked on sev­er­al diverse research top­ics includ­ing purifi­ca­tion process­es for semi­con­duc­tor indus­try, syn­gas reform­ing and CO2 cap­ture and mit­i­ga­tion tech­niques. At Air Liq­uide she has designed sev­er­al com­plex exper­i­men­tal test bench­es and worked on mul­ti­ple projects involv­ing poly­mer­iza­tion reac­tion stud­ies.
  • Wei Huang – Wei Huang is a Research Sci­en­tist at Gas Pro­duc­tion & Hydro­gen Ener­gy Appli­ca­tions Group, DELAWARE RESEARCH & TECHNOLOGY CENTER (DRTC) USA, Air Liq­uide. Wei obtained her Ph.D degree from Depart­ment of Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing, Uni­ver­si­ty of Delaware. She was co-advised by Prof. Jing­guang G. Chen and Prof. Raul F. Lobo. Her exper­tise is cat­a­lyst design and syn­the­sis, char­ac­ter­i­za­tion by var­i­ous tech­niques and pilot plant design and con­struc­tion. After grad­u­ate from UD, she joined Air Liq­uide in Oct. 2007 as a Research Sci­en­tist. Cur­rent­ly, she works on sev­er­al projects relat­ed to H2 and CO pro­duc­tion and ener­gy appli­ca­tion.
  • Bjorn Mod­en – Bjorn Mod­en is cur­rent­ly a Research Engi­neer at Zeolyst Inter­na­tion­al at the PQ Cor­po­ra­tion R&D cen­ter in Con­shohock­en, PA, where he is work­ing on zeo­lite devel­op­ment for envi­ron­men­tal appli­ca­tions. He received his Ph. D. in Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing from Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia, Berke­ley under the direc­tion of Enrique Igle­sia in 2006 and his under­grad­u­ate degree in Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing from the Roy­al Insti­tute of Tech­nol­o­gy (KTH), Stock­holm in 2000. Bjorn has been the Sec­re­tary of the Catal­y­sis Club of Philadel­phia since 2007.
  • Eliz­a­beth Ross-Medgaar­den – Eliz­a­beth is a Research Engi­neer with Lyon­dell­Basell Indus­tries work­ing in the Process Tech­nol­o­gy R&D group. She joined Lyon­dell­Basell direct­ly after receiv­ing her Ph.D. in Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing from Lehigh Uni­ver­si­ty under the direc­tion of Israel Wachs in Sep­tem­ber 2007 and Bach­e­lor of Sci­ence in Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing from Lafayette Col­lege in 2002. Elizabeth’s back­ground includes het­ero­ge­neous catal­y­sis syn­the­sis and opti­miza­tion, reac­tion and opti­cal spec­troscopy tech­niques, process reac­tion opti­miza­tion and process design, devel­op­ment and scale-up of new tech­nolo­gies. Eliz­a­beth has been a mem­ber of ACS and AIChE since 2000 and a mem­ber of the Catal­y­sis Club of Philadel­phia for the past 8 years and has served as a club Direc­tor since 2008.
  • Parag Shah – Parag is a Research Chemist at PQ Cor­po­ra­tion and is involved in devel­op­ing improved sil­i­ca-based sup­ports, new poly­olefin cat­a­lysts and process/product devel­op­ment for emerg­ing cat­a­lyst tech­nolo­gies. In 2008 he received his Ph.D. in Chem­i­cal and Bio­mol­e­c­u­lar Engi­neer­ing from Uni­ver­si­ty of Penn­syl­va­nia under the guid­ance of Prof. Ray­mond J. Gorte. His the­sis work focused on inves­ti­gat­ing the ther­mo­dy­nam­ic prop­er­ties of met­al-oxide cat­a­lysts. Parag earned his Bachelor’s degree in Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing from the Insti­tute of Chem­i­cal Tech­nol­o­gy, Uni­ver­si­ty of Bom­bay (India), and sub­se­quent­ly did a Mas­ters in Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Twente (The Nether­lands), with empha­sis on Process Devel­op­ment and Design. He has been a mem­ber of the Catal­y­sis Club of Philadel­phia since 2004.

Catalysis Club of Philadelphia: Winners of the Annual Student Poster Competition

The Catal­y­sis Club of Philadelphia’s Annu­al Stu­dent Poster Com­pe­ti­tion was held March 18th, 2010 with 23 stu­dent entries, and two post-doc­tor­al pre­sen­ters. Four run­ners-up includ­ed, Danielle Hans­gen (Uni­ver­si­ty of Delaware) with “Mod­el Based Pre­dic­tion of Bimetal­lic Cat­a­lysts for Hydro­gen Pro­duc­tion from Ammo­nia Decom­po­si­tion”; Eddie Martono (Uni­ver­si­ty of Penn­syl­va­nia) with “Stud­ies of the active sites on sup­port­ed cobalt cat­a­lysts for the steam reform­ing of ethanol”; Julie Moli­nari (Lehigh Uni­ver­si­ty) with “Raman, UV-Vis and IR-ATR Study of Vana­di­um Haloper­ox­i­dase Func­tion­al Mim­ics”; and Bill Lon­er­gan (Uni­ver­si­ty of Delaware) with “Struc­ture Prop­er­ty Rela­tion­ships of Sup­port­ed Pt/Ni Bimetal­lic Cat­a­lysts: Cor­re­lat­ing the Extent of Pt-Ni Bimetal­lic Bond For­ma­tion with Low-Tem­per­a­ture Hydro­gena­tion Activ­i­ty”.

Top hon­ors went to Dustin Fick­el from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Delaware, with his poster titled “Cop­per Coor­di­na­tion in Cu-SSZ-13 and Cu-SSZ-16 Inves­ti­gat­ed by Vari­able-Tem­per­a­ture XRD”. Along with top hon­ors, Dustin also received an invi­ta­tion to present his research at the Catal­y­sis Club’s Annu­al Spring Sym­po­sium, May 13th 2010 at Vil­lano­va Uni­ver­si­ty.

Support for Attendees to the 2010 Gordon Conference on Catalysis

We are pleased to announce that par­tial reg­is­tra­tion sup­port ($400), which will cov­er 50% of the reg­is­tra­tion fee, will be avail­able for grad­u­ate stu­dents, post-docs and ear­ly career fac­ul­ty. Approx­i­mate­ly 40–50 par­tic­i­pants will receive sup­port depend­ing on avail­able fund­ing. This sup­port is made pos­si­ble by grants from the Nation­al Sci­ence Foun­da­tion- Catal­y­sis and Kinet­ics Pro­gram, Depart­ment of Ener­gy — Office of Sci­ence, the North Amer­i­can Catal­y­sis Soci­ety, and indus­try con­trib­u­tors (see the GRC web­site for an updat­ed list as this sup­port becomes avail­able).

Request for sup­port should be sent by apply­ing to the con­fer­ence chair via email to datye@​unm.​edu and by ensur­ing that the fol­low­ing text appears in the sub­ject head­ing of your email GRC 2010 Catal­y­sis. Please sub­mit your appli­ca­tion before March 31, 2010, and include as an attach­ment one pdf doc­u­ment that includes a short one page CV, a state­ment of your research inter­ests, and one page let­ter of endorse­ment from your research advi­sor (for stu­dents and post-docs) or one page let­ter of cur­rent and pend­ing sup­port (in case of junior fac­ul­ty). Sup­port will be allo­cat­ed to one stu­dent or post-doc per research group (unless addi­tion­al sup­port becomes avail­able) and to junior fac­ul­ty who are at the ear­ly career stage (with min­i­mal extra­mur­al fund­ing). The par­tic­i­pants who receive sup­port are required to present a poster at the meet­ing. Fur­ther infor­ma­tion on the con­fer­ence and trav­el sup­port can be obtained from Prof. Datye’s web site: http://www.unm.edu/~cmem/labs/catalysis/index.html.

To attend the GRC, you must apply via the fol­low­ing web site: http://​www​.grc​.org/​p​r​o​g​r​a​m​s​.​a​s​p​x​?​y​e​a​r​=​2​0​1​0​&​p​r​o​g​r​a​m​=​c​a​t​a​l​y​sis.

For fur­ther infor­ma­tion, please con­tact the con­fer­ence orga­niz­ers:

Abhaya K. Datye, Chair
Dis­tin­guished Pro­fes­sor
Uni­ver­si­ty of New Mex­i­co
Albu­querque, NM, 87131–0001
505–277-0477
datye@​unm.​edu

Bruce Cook, Vice–Chair
Advanced Refin­ing Man­ag­er
BP Prod­ucts N.A.
Naperville, IL, 60563–8460
630–420-3833
Bruce.​Cook2@​bp.​com

Call for Nominations of The 2010 Catalysis Club of Philadelphia Award

Each year the Catal­y­sis Club of Philadel­phia rec­og­nizes an out­stand­ing mem­ber of the catal­y­sis com­mu­ni­ty, who has made sig­nif­i­cant con­tri­bu­tions to the advance­ment of Catal­y­sis. Such advance­ment can be sci­en­tif­ic, tech­no­log­i­cal, or in orga­ni­za­tion lead­er­ship. The Award con­sists of a plaque and a $1000 cash prize.

We appre­ci­ate your help in sub­mit­ting nom­i­na­tions. The entire nom­i­na­tion pack­age, includ­ing a resume and rec­om­men­da­tion let­ters, should not be more than 10 pages. The dead­line for the receipt of nom­i­na­tions is April 15, 2010. Pri­or nom­i­na­tion pack­ages sent in 2007 or lat­er will auto­mat­i­cal­ly be con­sid­ered for the 2010 Award.

Nom­i­na­tion let­ter along with sup­port­ing mate­ri­als should be emailed to chenh@​jmusa.​com.

Dr. Hai-Ying Chen
John­son Matthey Inc.
436 Devon Park Dri­ve
Wayne, PA 19087
Phone (610) 341‑3441

Pre­vi­ous Win­ners of the Award

  • 2009 Ted Oya­ma
  • 2008 David Olson
  • 2007 John Vohs
  • 2006 James Dumesic
  • 2005 Israel Wachs
  • 2004 Jing­guang Chen
  • 2003 Frank E. Herkes
  • 2002 Steven D. Ittel
  • 2001 Mark Barteau
  • 2000 Hen­ry C. Foley
  • 1999 Anne M. Gaffney
  • 1998 Ray Gorte
  • 1997 Leo E. Manz­er
  • 1996 Mae Rubin
  • 1995 John N. Armor
  • 1994 Theodore A. Koch
  • 1993 George Kerr
  • 1992 Fran Waller
  • 1991 John A. Sofranko
  • 1990 Wern­er O. Haag
  • 1989 Mau­rice Mitchell, Jr.
  • 1988 George Koko­tai­lo
  • 1987 James E. Lyons
  • 1986 Bruce C. Gates
  • 1985 N.Y. Chen
  • 1984 James R. Katzer
  • 1983 Edward Rosin­s­ki
  • 1982 Robert Eis­chens
  • 1981 James F. Roth
  • 1980 Abra­ham Schnei­der
  • 1979 Alvin B. Stiles
  • 1978 George W. Par­shall
  • 1977 G.C.A. Schuit
  • 1976 Heinz Heine­mann
  • 1975 Paul Venu­to
  • 1974 Roland C. Hans­ford
  • 1973 Paul B. Weisz
  • 1972 Alfred E. Hirschler­li
  • 1971 G. Alex Mills
  • 1970 Paul H. Emmett
  • 1969 Charles J. Plank
  • 1968 Adal­bert Farkas