News

October 7, 2020

2020 ChemE Kids Day registration now open; free event to be virtual

ChemE Kids Day, an annual free event designed to give students in grades 3-5 an opportunity to learn about chemical engineering and science, will be held virtually on October 17 from 11:00am - 2:00 p.m. The event is hosted by Omega Chi Epsilon, the national chemical engineering honor society, will include hands-on activities that can be completed at home.
October 6, 2020

ChE Professor Bryan Boudouris receives American Physical Society's 2021 John H. Dillon Medal

Dr. Bryan Boudouris, a Professor of Chemical Engineering and of Chemistry (by Courtesy) at Purdue University, has been selected to receive the American Physical Society's 2021 John H. Dillon Medal. Dr. Boudouris was selected for his "fundamental insights connecting polymer structure with charge transport in free radical conducting polymers, organic electronics, and functional block copolymers."
October 4, 2020

Purdue Engineering Fellows announced, including ChE student Christina Core

The Purdue College of Engineering named its 2020-2021 Engineering Fellows during a recent virtual event. Thanks to the generosity of benefactors Robert H. Buckman (BSChE '59) and his wife, Joyce A. Mollerup, five students each will receive a $10,000 gift upon graduation in 2021. Davidson School of Chemical Engineering student Christina Core, of Hudson, Ohio, is one of this year's recipients.
September 29, 2020

Dr. Letian Dou leads Purdue researchers discovering ways to improve solar cell efficiency; featured by Inside Indiana Business

A research team led by Purdue University says it has found a way to make more efficient solar cells with materials previously thought to be too unstable for use. The dominant material used in solar cells is silicon, which Purdue Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering Letian Dou says, in a recent Inside Indiana Business interview, is "pretty efficient" and has a reasonable cost, but is also very heavy. However, Dou says the new materials, called halide perovskites, are soft, flexible and "extremely cheap."
September 27, 2020

ChE alumna Dr. Jennifer Sinclair Curtis (BSChE '83) elected APS Fellow

Purdue Chemical Engineering alumna Dr. Jennifer Sinclair Curtis has been elected as American Physical Society (APS) Fellow in the Division of Fluid Mechanics. Dr. Curtis is a 2013 Outstanding Chemical Engineer and a 2019 College of Engineering Distinguished Alumni.
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