Claire S Adjiman, Editor-in-Chief
Imperial College London, UK
Claire Adjiman is Professor of Chemical Engineering at Imperial College London. She holds an MEng from Imperial College and a PhD from Princeton University, both in Chemical Engineering. Her research is focused on multiscale process and molecular/materials design, including the development of design methods, property prediction techniques and optimisation algorithms. She works extensively with industry, especially the oil and gas, pharmaceuticals and agrochemicals sectors and has been involved in the commercialisation of thermodynamic modelling software (gSAFT).
She is a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (2015), an International Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2022) and of the US National Academy of Engineering (2023). She is also a Fellow of the Institution of Chemical Engineers and the Â鶹AV. She has received awards that include a RAEng-ICI Fellowship (1998-2003), the Philip Leverhulme Prize for Engineering (2009), the SCI Armstrong Lecture (2011), an EPSRC Leadership Fellowship (2012-2017), and the Â鶹AV Elizabeth Colbourn Memorial Lecture (2020), the American Institute of Chemical Engineers’ Computing in Chemical Engineering Award (2021). She co-edited a book on Molecular Systems Engineering published (Wiley-VCH). At Imperial, she was a Founding Co-Director of the Institute for Molecular Science and Engineering (2015-2020) and she is Director of the Centre for Process Systems Engineering (on sabbatical this year). She is a Trustee of Future Innovation in Process Systems Engineering (FIPSE). She is/has been a member of several advisory bodies, in the UK (EPSRC Strategic Advisory Network) and Singapore (CARES-C4T), and chairs the Scientific Advisory Board of the Max Planck Institute for Dynamics of Complex Technical Systems Magdeburg (Germany).
Andrew Ferguson, Deputy Editor-in-Chief
University of Chicago, USA
Andrew Ferguson is an Associate Professor at the Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering at the University of Chicago. He earned an M.Eng. in Chemical Engineering from Imperial College London in 2005, a Ph.D. in Chemical and Biological Engineering from Princeton University in 2010, and from 2010 to 2012 he was a Postdoctoral Fellow of the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard in the Department of Chemical Engineering at MIT. He commenced his independent career in the department of Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in August 2012.
His research uses molecular simulation, statistical thermodynamics, and machine learning to understand and engineer self-assembling and biomolecular materials. Ferguson is the recipient of a 2020 Dreyfus Foundation Award for Machine Learning in the Chemical Sciences and Engineering and a 2018/19 Junior Moulton Medal of the Institution of Chemical Engineers.
Luke Connal, Associate editor
Australian National University, Australia
Luke Connal is an Associate Professor at the Research School of Chemistry at the Australian National University (ANU) where he is an ANU Futures Fellow. His research program is in the design of advanced polymeric materials for applied systems. He has been recognised by numerous awards such as the ACS Chemical and Engineering News Talented 12.
Yongye Liang, Associate editor
Southern University of Science and Technology, China
Yongye Liang is Associate Professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at the Southern University of Science and Technology, China. His primary research interest is molecular engineering, which combines chemical design and synthesis with device studies to develop advanced functional materials for organic electronics, electrocatalysis, and bioimaging. Professor Liang was named by Thomson Reuters a 2016 Highly Cited Researcher.
Anna Slater, Associate editor
University of Liverpool, UK
Anna Slater is a Professor and Royal Society University Research Fellow in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Liverpool, UK. A supramolecular and organic materials chemist by training, Anna developed an interest in flow chemistry during PDRA positions. Exploiting flow technology, automation, and molecular design for enhanced control of chemical processes are central themes of her work, for which she was awarded the 2023 Â鶹AV Harrison-Meldola Memorial Prize.
Anna is a member of the Â鶹AV Macrocyclic and Supramolecular Chemistry committee and the Women in Supramolecular Chemistry network (WISC), supporting equity and diversity in the chemical sciences.
Linda Broadbelt
Northwestern University, USA
Linda Broadbelt is Sarah Rebecca Roland Professor in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering and the Associate Dean for Research of the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science at Northwestern University. She was Chair of the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering from 2009-2017. She was also appointed the Donald and June Brewer Junior Professor from 1994-1996. She has completed the short course Business for Scientists and Engineers through the Kellogg Graduate School of Management.
Her research and teaching interests are in the areas of multiscale modeling, complex kinetics modeling, environmental catalysis, novel biochemical pathways, and polymerization/depolymerization kinetics. She served as the Past Chair, Chair, First Vice Chair and Second Vice Chair of the Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Division of AIChE, and also previously served on the Executive Board of the National Program Committee of AIChE. She is currently an Associate Editor for Industrial &Engineering Chemistry Research.
Her honors include selection as the winner of the R.H. Wilhelm Award in Chemical Reaction Engineering from AIChE, the E.V. Murphree Award in Industrial Chemistry and Engineering from the American Chemical Society, the Dorothy Ann and Clarence Ver Steeg Award, a CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation, and an AIChE Women’s Initiative Committee Mentorship Excellence Award, selection as a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a Fellow of AIChE, and a Fulbright Distinguished Scholar, appointment to the Defense Science Study Group of the Institute for Defense Analyses, and selection as the Su Distinguished Lecturer at University of Rochester, Ernest W. Thiele Lecturer at the University of Notre Dame and the Allan P. Colburn Lecturer at the University of Delaware.
LaShanda Korley
University of Delaware, USA
Prof. LaShanda T. J. Korley is a Distinguished Professor in the Departments of Materials Science & Engineering and Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering at the University of Delaware (UD). Prof. Korley is the Director of an Energy Frontier Research Center – Center for Plastics Innovation (CPI) funded by the Department of Energy and also the Co-Director of a Materials Research Science and Center – UD Center for Hybrid, Active, and Responsive Materials (UD CHARM). She is also the Principal Investigator for the National Science Foundation Partnerships for International Research and Education (PIRE): Bio-inspired Materials and Systems and the co-director of the Center for Research in Soft Matter & Polymers (CRiSP) at the University of Delaware. Her research focuses on bio-inspired polymeric materials, film and fiber manufacturing, plastics recycling and upcycling strategies, stimuli-responsive composites, peptide-polymer hybrids, fiber-reinforced hydrogels, and renewable materials derived from biomass.
Anja Palmans
TU Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Anja Palmans is a professor of “Supramolecular Chemistry and Catalysis” at the Department of Chemical Engineering and Chemistry. Her research interests include supramolecular and polymer chemistry, catalysis, and the use of dynamic bonds to create reusable materials.
Integrating polymer and supramolecular chemistry with the novel field of bio-orthogonal chemistry allows access to copolymers that form nanometer-sized structures, capable of efficient and selective catalysis in water and in complex cellular media. Also, by combining non-covalent and dynamic covalent bonds, smart polymeric materials are developed that can be easily reshaped, reused, and broken down into the constituting parts.
Patrick Stayton
University of Washington, USA
Patrick Stayton is Washington Research Foundation Professor and Director of the Molecular Engineering and Sciences Institute at the University of Washington. He is the founding Director of the Institute for Molecular Engineering and Sciences, and the Center for Intracellular Delivery of Biologics. His research group works at the interface of fundamental molecular science and applied molecular bioengineering. Studies are aimed at elucidating the basic principles underlying biomolecular recognition, and connected projects applying these principles to medical applications in the drug delivery, medical diagnostics, and regenerative medicine fields. He has also been awarded the 2009 Faculty Research Innovation Award, UW College of Engineering, and the Distinguished Teacher and Mentor Award from the Department of Bioengineering.