Lauren Garten

Lauren Garten's profile picture
lauren.garten@mse.gatech.edu

Lauren Garten joined the School of Materials Science and Engineering as an assistant professor in Fall 2021. Her group focuses on developing new materials for energy and electronic applications, particularly at the nexus between ferroelectricity, ferromagnetism, electronics, and photovoltaics. 

Lauren received her B.S. in ceramic engineering from the Missouri University of Science and Technology. She then went on to earn a Ph.D. in material science from the Pennsylvania State University for her work on ferroelectric, piezoelectric, and dielectric synthesis and characterization with Prof. Susan Trolier-McKinstry. She then became a post-doc at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory working on metastable materials for energy applications. After a very short stint as a material scientist at Sandia National Laboratory, she won the NRC Research Associateship from the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Math which was hosted at the U.S. Naval Research Lab (NRL). She then received the Jerome and Isabella Karle Distinguished Scholar Fellowship from NRL to work on lead-free multiferroic materials and devices.

Assistant Professor, School of Materials Science and Engineering
Phone
404-894-5748
Office
Pettit 210
Additional Research

Electronics, Energy Harvesting, Energy Storage, Solar

University, College, and School/Department

Preet Singh

Preet Singh's profile picture
preet.singh@mse.gatech.edu

Prior to joining MSE in July 2003 Professor Singh was a faculty member in Corrosion and Materials Engineering Group at The Institute of Paper Science and Technology (IPST) since 1996.  While in IPST Singh worked on fundamental as well as applied research projects related to the corrosion problems in the pulp and paper industry. From 1990 to 1996, he was a Senior Research Associate at Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, working on various materials and corrosion related research projects, including damage accumulation in metal matrix composites (MMCs), Environmental sensitive fracture of Al-alloys MMCs, and High temperature oxidation of Nb/Nb5Si3 composites. He received the Alcan International's Fellowship in 1988-90 to work on "Effects of Low Melting Point Impurities on Slow Crack Growth in Al Alloys,"  He has published over 50 papers in reputed scientific journals and conference proceedings. He is active member of NACE, TMS, TAPPI and has co-organized a number of international symposiums.

Reliable performance of the materials is very important for any industrial process and especially for the chemical process industry for the manufacture of a high quality product. Material selection is generally based on the required material properties, low initial capital investment, and minimum maintenance. Changes in the process parameters to improve products can often lead to higher corrosion susceptibilities of the plant materials. Moreover, with increase in capital cost, there is pressure to extend the life of existing plant equipment beyond its original design life. Corrosion and Materials Engineers are also playing a key role in selecting, maintaining, and modifying materials for changing needs for every industry. Corrosion Science and Engineering research includes understanding the basic mechanisms involved in material degradation in given environments and using that knowledge to develop a mitigation strategy against environment-induced failures

Professor, School of Materials Science and Engineering
Associate Chair of Graduate Studies, School of Materials Science and Engineering
Phone
404.894.6641
Office
IPST 246
Additional Research

Composites; fracture and fatigue; stress corrosion; Materials Failure and Reliability; Biofuels; Chemical Recovery; Environmental Processes; Sustainable Manufacturing; Energy & Water; Corrosion & Reliability

Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=AqrDFI8AAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate

Carson Meredith

Carson Meredith headshot photo
carson.meredith@chbe.gatech.edu

Carson Meredith is Professor and James Preston Harris Faculty Fellow in the School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering at Georgia Tech and serves as Executive Director of the Renewable Bioproducts Institute (RBI). 

 

His research focuses on sustainable materials and bioproducts, with particular emphasis on biomass-derived polymers such as cellulose and chitin nanomaterials. Representing the contributions of students and collaborators, this work addresses critical challenges in packaging, coatings, and recycling, and has been featured in NewsweekNBC Nightly NewsBBC, and NPR. Meredith’s research also includes innovations in polymer films, foams, composites and particle adhesion.

 

Meredith has published over 140 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters, with more than 7,600 citations. His recent research includes the development of recyclable nanocellulose coatings and water vapor-resistant films using renewable materials. He has received multiple patents and has led over $30 million in federal and industry funded research. 

 

Meredith has served in leadership roles across campus and nationally. At Georgia Tech, he has led RBI since 2020, one of eleven interdisciplinary research institutes, where he has built a community of over 70 faculty focused on circular materials, bio industrial manufacturing, and low-impact papermaking. He is also a member of advisory boards for the Bioproducts Institute (University of British Columbia) and the DOE Joint Bioenergy Institute (JBEI) and serves on the editorial board of Green Materials

 

He teaches courses in forest product technology and sustainable materials, and co-founded GT-EQUAL, the first American Chemistry Society Bridge Program in chemical engineering. He also led the development of a graduate certificate in Data Science for the Chemical Industry and created a MOOC on High-Throughput Development of Materials, which has reached over 14,000 learners. 

 

Meredith earned his Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin and his B.Ch.E. from Georgia Tech. 

Shape 

Research 

Meredith’s research centers on sustainable materials and bioproducts, with a focus on: 

  • Cellulose and chitin nanomaterials 

  • Renewable packaging and coatings         

  • Polymer thin films and foams

  • Particle adhesion 

  • Energy efficient drying in natural fiber manufacturing

     

His work integrates environmental sustainability into materials design and manufacturing, and he collaborates across disciplines to advance scalable climate solutions. 

Shape 

Awards and Distinctions 

 

Selected Publications 

  • Hickmann, T., Tao, L., Stingelin, N., Meredith, J.C. (2024). Low-water-permeability foils based on bio-renewable cellulose-derivatives. RSC Sustainability, 2, 3451–3455. 

  • Ji, Y., Shen, D.E., Lu, Y., Schueneman, G.T., Shofner, M.L., Meredith, J.C. (2023). Aqueous-based recycling of cellulose nanocrystal / chitin nanowhisker barrier coatings. ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering, 11, 10874–10883. 

  • Shin, D., Choi, W.T., Lin, H., Qu, Z., Breedveld, V., Meredith, J.C. (2019). Humidity-Tolerant Capillary Viscous Adhesion of the Honey Bee Pollen Basket Fluid. Nature Communications, 10, 1379. 

  • Satam, C., Irvin, C.W., Lang, A.W., Jallorina, J.C.R., Shofner, M.L., Reynolds, J.R., Meredith, J.C. (2018). Spray-Coated Multilayer Cellulose Nanocrystal—Chitin Nanofiber Films for Barrier Applications. ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering, 6, 10637–10644. 

     

A full list of publications is available on Google Scholar. 

Executive Director, Renewable Bioproducts Institute
Professor and James Harris Faculty Fellow, School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Phone
404.385.2151
Office
ES&T 1212
Additional Research

Catalysis; Cellulosic Nanomaterials; Separation Technologies; Nanocellulose Applications; Aerogels & Hydrogels; Films & Coatings; Coatings & Barriers; Biomaterials

Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=3qOG6PUAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate

Mark Losego

Mark Losego's profile picture
losego@gatech.edu

Mark D. Losego is a professor in the School of Materials Science and Engineering at Georgia Tech. The Losego research lab focuses on materials processing to develop novel organic-inorganic hybrid materials and interfaces for microelectronics, sustainable energy devices, national security technologies, and advanced textiles. The Losego Lab combines a unique set of solution and vapor phase processing methods to convert organic polymers into organic-inorganic hybrid materials, including developing the science to scale these processes for manufacturing.  Prof. Losego’s work is primarily experimental, and researchers in his lab gain expertise in the vapor phase processing of materials (atomic layer deposition, physical vapor deposition, vapor phase infiltration, etc.), the design and construction of vacuum equipment, interfacial and surface science, and materials and surface characterization. Depending on the project, Losego Lab researchers explore a variety of properties ranging from electrical to electrochemical to optical to thermal to sorptive to catalytic and more.

Professor, MSE Faculty Fellow, and Dean’s Education Innovation Professor
Phone
404.385.3630
Additional Research

Catalysis; Cellulose Nanomaterials; Coatings; Coatings and Barriers; Corrosion & Materials Engineering; Corrosion and Reliability; Energy; Films and Coatings; Microporous Materials; Nanocellulose Applications; Nanomaterials; New Materials; Polymers; Vapor Phase Processing

Natalie Stingelin

Natalie  Stingelin's profile picture
natalie.stingelin@mse.gatech.edu

Previously a professor of organic functional materials at the Department of Materials, Imperial College of London, Natalie Stingelin joined Georgia Tech in 2016. She focuses her research on the broad field of organic functional materials, including organic electronics; multifunctional inorganic/organic hybrids; smart, advanced optical systems based on organic matter; and bioelectronics. Associate Editor of the Journal of Materials Chemistry, she has published more than 130 papers and 6 issued patents. She is a co-investigator of the newly established EPSRC Centre for Innovative Manufacturing in Large Area Electronics, and she leads the EC Marie-Curie Training Network 'INFORM' that involves 11 European partners. She was awarded the Institute of Materials, Minerals & Mining's Rosenhain Medal and Prize (2014) and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) President's International Fellowship Initiative (PIFI) Award for Visiting Scientists (2015).

Professor, School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Phone
404.894.5192
Office
ES&T L1220
Additional Research

Organic electronics; Bioelectronics

Research Focus Areas
University, College, and School/Department
Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=ZILIcOwAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate

Christopher Jones

Christopher Jones's profile picture
cjones@chbe.gatech.edu

Chris Jones was born in suburban Detroit, Michigan in July of 1973. After his primary and secondary schooling and 14 years living Troy, Michigan, he enrolled as a chemical engineering student at the University of Michigan. In route to earning a BSE in chemical engineering, Chris carried out research on transition metal carbide and nitride catalytic materials under the direction of Levi Thompson. After graduating in 1995, Chris moved to Pasadena, California, to study inorganic materials chemistry and catalysis under Mark E. Davis at Caltech. There he earned M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in chemical engineering in 1997 and 1999, respectively. Subsequently, he studied organometallic chemistry and olefin polymerization under the direction of both Davis and John E Bercaw at Caltech. He started as an assistant professor at Georgia Tech in the summer of 2000 and was promoted to associate professor in July 2005. In May, 2005, he was appointed the J. Carl and Sheila Pirkle Faculty Fellow, followed by a promotion to professor in July 2008. He was named New-Vision Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering in July 2011. In 2015, he became the Love Family Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, and in 2019 the William R. McLain Chair. Chris was named the associate vice president for research at Georgia Tech in November 2013. In this role, he directed 50% of his time on campus-wide research administration with a primary focus on interdisciplinary research efforts and policy related to research institutes, centers and research core facilities. In 2018, he served as the interim executive vice-president for research, before returning full time to his research and teaching roles in chemical and biomolecular engineering in 2019.

Jones directs a research program focused primarily on catalysis and CO2 separation, sequestration and utilization. A major focus of his laboratory is the development of materials and processes for the removal of CO2 from air, or “direct air capture” (DAC). In 2010 he was honored with the Ipatieff Prize from the American Chemical Society for his work on palladium catalyzed Heck and Suzuki coupling reactions. That same year, he was selected as the founding Editor-in-Chief of ACS Catalysis, a new multi-disciplinary catalysis journal published by the American Chemical Society. In 2013, Chris was recognized by the North American Catalysis Society with the Paul E. Emmett Award in Fundamental Catalysis and by the American Society of Engineering Education with the Curtis W. McGraw Research Award. In 2016 he was recognized by the American Institute of Chemical Engineers with the Andreas Acrivos Award for Professional Progress in Chemical Engineering, distinguishing him as one of the top academic chemical engineers under 45. In 2020, after ten years building and leading ACS Catalysis, he was selected as the founding Editor-in-Chief of JACS Au by an international editorial search committee commissioned by the ACS. Dr. Jones has been PI or co-PI on over $72M in sponsored research in the last seventeen years, and as of December 2020, has published over 300 papers that have been cited >28,000 times. He has an H-Index of 82 (Google Scholar).

Professor and John F. Brock III School Chair, School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Phone
404.385.1683
Office
ES&T 2202
Additional Research

CO2 capture, catalysis, membrane and separations, separations technology, catalysis, carbon capture, biofuels

Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=ltWKpYgAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate

Yan Wang

Yan Wang's profile picture
yan.wang@me.gatech.edu

Wang's research is in the areas of design, manufacturing, and Integrated computational materials engineering. He is interested in computer-aided design, geometric modeling and processing, computer-aided manufacturing, multiscale simulation, and uncertainty quantification.

Currently, Wang studies integrated product-materials design and manufacturing process design, where process-structure-property relationships are established with physics-based data-driven approaches for design optimization. The Multiscale Systems Engineering research group led by him develops new methodologies and computational schemes to solve the technical challenges of high dimensionality, high complexity, and uncertainty associated with product, process, and systems design at multiple length and time scales.

Computational design tools for multiscale systems with sizes ranging from nanometers to kilometers will be indispensable for engineers' daily work in the near future. The research mission of the Multiscale Systems Engineering group is to create new modeling and simulation mechanisms and tools with underlying scientific rigor that are suitable for multiscale systems engineering for better and faster product innovation. Our education mission is to train engineers of the future to gain necessary knowledge as well as analytical, computational, communication, and self-learning skills for future work in a collaborative environment as knowledge creators and integrators. 

Professor, Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering
Phone
404.894.4714
Office
Callaway 472
Additional Research

Computer-aided engineering and design and manufacturing, modeling and simulation, nanoscale cad/cam/cae, product lifecycle management, applied algorithms, uncertainty modeling, multiscale modeling, materials design

Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=rK2ow1kAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate

Christopher Muhlstein

Christopher Muhlstein's profile picture
christopher.muhlstein@mse.gatech.edu

Muhlstein has worked as an engineering consultant at Exponent, Inc. (Failure Analysis Associates). In September, 2002 he joined the faculty in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at The Pennsylvania State University and was tenured and promoted to associate professor in 2008.

 Muhlstein’s research focuses on understanding the mechanisms of fracture and fatigue in bulk and thin film materials. Muhlstein is a member of Alpha Sigma Mu and Keramos honor societies and an NSF CAREER award recipient. In 2007 he was also named the Corning Research Faculty Fellow in Materials Science and Engineering at The Pennsylvania State University. 

Associate Professor, School of Materials Science and Engineering
Associate Director, MPRL
Phone
404.385.1235
Office
Love 274
Additional Research

Fracture and Fatigue; Thin Films; Polymeric Composites; Advanced Characterization; Nanomaterials; Structural Materials; Paper & Board Mechanics; Biomaterials; Nanocellulose Applications; Biocomposites; New Materials

Kyriaki Kalaitzidou

Kyriaki Kalaitzidou's profile picture
kyriaki.kalaitzidou@me.gatech.edu

Kalaitzidou joined Georgia Tech as an assistant professor in the G.W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering in November of 2007. She also holds an adjunct appointment in the School of Materials Science and Engineering. She obtained her Ph.D. in manufacturing and characterization of polymer nanocomposites (PNCs) from Michigan State University and worked as a post-doctoral researcher on mechanics of soft materials in the Polymer Science and Engineering Department at University of Massachusetts, Amherst. She was promoted to professor in 2019 and was also named a Rae S. and Frank H. Neely Professor in the same year. In November 2019 Kalaitzidou was named the Associate Chair for Faculty Development.

Rae S. and Frank H. Neely Professor, Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering
Associate Chair for Faculty Development, Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering
IMat Initiative Lead | Circularity of Biopolymers
Phone
404.385.3446
Office
MARC Building Room 38
Additional Research

Additive/Advanced Manufacturing; multifunctional materials; Nanocomposites; Polymers; Surfaces and Interfaces; Manufacturing; Mechanics of Materials; Biomaterials

Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=RZvLH5QAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate

Ryan Lively

Ryan Lively's profile picture
ryan.lively@chbe.gatech.edu

Ryan Lively was born in 1984. He spent approximately 16 years in Gainesville, FL and attended almost every home football game at The Swamp. He enrolled at Georgia Tech in 2002 as an eager Chemical Engineering student and has been a Yellow Jacket at heart ever since. During his studies at Georgia Tech, Ryan worked on research projects as diverse as ab initio quantum mechanical methods to estimate molecular binding energies, fresh Georgia peach preservation, composite spinneret design, dual-layer hollow fiber membrane spinning, and sorbent-loaded fiber spinning. Ryan introduced a rapid temperature swing adsorption (RTSA) approach for post-combustion CO2 capture, which was successfully demonstrated by adapting knowledge developed in membrane science to design unique nanoscale composite adsorbent/heat exchangers. After his Ph.D. (awarded in 2010), he spent almost 3 years as a post-doctoral research engineer at Algenol Biofuels, where he published 25 papers and filed two U.S. patent applications. His work at Algenol focused on developing energy-efficient liquid and vapor separation systems for downstream biofuel purification. 

He is now the Thomas C. DeLoach Professor in the School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology. His current research seeks to revolutionize fluid separation processes critical to the global energy and carbon infrastructure. He has a specific focus on membrane- and adsorbent-based science and technology to address some of the most difficult chemical separations. His group’s research activities range from fundamental material science and discovery to translational engineering applications focusing on making and testing separation devices. 

Ryan has received a variety of awards for his research efforts including the 2020 Allan P. Colburn Award from AIChE, and the 2022 Curtis W. McGraw Award from ASEE. He is currently an Editor for the Journal of Membrane Science and is the Secretary of the North American Membrane Society. He is the Director of the Center for Understanding & Controlling Accelerated and Gradual Evolution of Materials for Energy (UNCAGE-ME), an Energy Frontier Research Center of the US Department of Energy. He has over 160 publications in the field of separations including articles in Science, Nature and other impactful venues.

Professor, School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Thomas C. DeLoach Jr. Endowed Professorship
Phone
(404) 894-8795
Additional Research

Biofuels; Carbon Capture; Separations Technology; Membranes; Adsorbents;Polymers; Microporous Materials

Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=1ktJriEAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate