Christopher Muhlstein

Christopher Muhlstein

Christopher Muhlstein

Associate Professor, School of Materials Science and Engineering
Associate Director, MPRL

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. 

christopher.muhlstein@mse.gatech.edu

404.385.1235

Office Location:
Love 274

MSE Profile Page

  • Mechanical Properties Characterization Facility
  • Research Focus Areas:
    • Biobased Materials
    • Biochemicals
    • Biorefining
    • Biotechnology
    • Materials and Nanotechnology
    • Pulp Paper Packaging & Tissue
    • Sustainable Manufacturing
    Additional Research:
    Fracture and Fatigue; Thin Films; Polymeric Composites; Advanced Characterization; Nanomaterials; Structural Materials; Paper & Board Mechanics; Biomaterials; Nanocellulose Applications; Biocomposites; New Materials

    IRI Connections:

    Kyriaki Kalaitzidou

    Kyriaki Kalaitzidou

    Kyriaki Kalaitzidou

    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

    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.

    kyriaki.kalaitzidou@me.gatech.edu

    404.385.3446

    Office Location:
    MARC Building Room 38

  • ME Profile Page
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
    • Biobased Materials
    • Biochemicals
    • Biorefining
    • Biotechnology
    • Materials and Nanotechnology
    • Pulp Paper Packaging & Tissue
    • Sustainable Manufacturing
    Additional Research:
    Additive/Advanced Manufacturing; multifunctional materials; Nanocomposites; Polymers; Surfaces and Interfaces; Manufacturing; Mechanics of Materials; Biomaterials

    IRI Connections:

    Ryan Lively

    Ryan Lively

    Ryan Lively

    Professor
    Thomas C. DeLoach Jr. Endowed Professorship

    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.

    ryan.lively@chbe.gatech.edu

    (404) 894-8795

    Website

  • Research Website
  • Google Scholar

    University, College, and School/Department
    Research Focus Areas:
    • Biobased Materials
    • Biochemicals
    • Biorefining
    • Biotechnology
    • Fuels & Chemical Processing
    • Hydrogen Production
    • Materials for Energy
    • Pulp Paper Packaging & Tissue
    • Renewable Energy
    • Sustainable Manufacturing
    Additional Research:
    Biofuels; Carbon Capture; Separations Technology; Membranes; Adsorbents;Polymers; Microporous Materials

    IRI Connections:

    Pamela Peralta-Yahya

    Pamela Peralta-Yahya

    Pamela Peralta-Yahya

    Associate Professor, School of Chemistry and Biochemistry

    Peralta-Yahya has been part of Georgia Tech since 2012. Her diverse research group composed of chemists, biologists, and chemical engineers works in the area of engineering biology, drawing from principles of biochemistry and engineering to build systems for chemical detection and production. Specifically, her group focuses on the development of G protein-coupled receptors for biotechnology and biomedical applications, and the engineering of biological systems for the production of fuels and functionalized plant natural products. Early on, her work was recognized with several awards including a DARPA Young Faculty Award, a DuPont Young Professor Award, a Kavli Fellowship by the US Academy of Science, and an NIH MIRA award. Her group’s key accomplishments are 1) the standardization of GPCR-based sensors in yeast to reduce the cost and accelerate the pace of drug discovery for these receptors, which are the target of over 30% of FDA approved drugs, and 2) the development of advanced biofuels, including pinene, which, when dimerized, has sufficient energy content to power rockets and missiles.  Today, her group is funded to work on these and other cutting edge areas – including how to power a rocket returning from Mars and how to make synthetic cells learn without evolution – by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, and NASA.

    pperalta-yahya@chemistry.gatech.edu

    404.894.4228

    Office Location:
    MoSE 2100P

    Chem & BioChem Profile Page

  • Peralta-Yahya Group
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
    • Biobased Materials
    • Biochemicals
    • Biorefining
    • Biotechnology
    • Chemical Biology
    • Pulp Paper Packaging & Tissue
    • Renewable Energy
    • Sustainable Manufacturing
    Additional Research:
    Bio-Inspired Materials; Biofuels; Cell biophysics; Cellular Materials; Biochemistry; Biomanufacturing; Energy; Biomaterials

    IRI Connections:

    Hang Lu

    Hang Lu

    Hang Lu

    Associate Dean for Research and Innovation, College of Engineering
    C. J. "Pete" Silas Chair, School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

    Hang Lu received her B.S. from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign and her M.S.C.E.P and Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She is currently the Associate Dean for Research and Innovation in the College of Engineering and C. J. "Pete" Silas Chair, School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Lu's research interests involve the interface of engineering and biology and her lab, the Lu Fluidics Group, is conducting research at these interface levels. The Lu Fluidics Group engineers BioMEMS (Bio Micro-Electro-Mechanical System) and microfluidic devices to address questions in neuroscience, cell biology, and biotechnology that are difficult to answer using conventional techniques.

    Faces of Research - Profile Article

    hang.lu@gatech.edu

    404.894.8473

    Office Location:
    EBB 3017

    Lµ Fluidics Group

  • ChBE Profile Page
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
    • Big Data
    • Cancer Biology
    • Chemical Biology
    • Drug Design, Development and Delivery
    • Nanomaterials
    • Neuroscience
    • Regenerative Medicine
    • Systems Biology
    Additional Research:
    Microfluidic systems for high-throughput screens and image-based genetics and genomicsSystems biology: large-scale experimentation and data miningMicrotechnologies for optical stimulation and optical recordingBig data, machine vision, automationDevelopmental neurobiology, behavioral neurobiology, systems neuroscienceCancer, immunology, embryonic development, stem cells

    IRI Connections:

    Carsten Sievers

    Carsten Sievers

    Carsten Sievers

    Professor, School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
    RBI Initiative Lead: Maximizing the Value of Products from Plastics Upcycling

    Sievers’ research interests are in heterogeneous catalysis, reactor design, applied spectroscopy, and characterization and synthesis of solid materials. Combining these interests he seeks to develop processes for the production of fuels and chemicals. His research program combines fundamental and applied research.

    In fundamental studies, a suite of analytical and spectroscopic techniques (e.g. IR, NMR) is used to gain knowledge on structure-reactivity relationships of heterogeneous catalysts. Moreover, surface reactions are studied on a molecular level to identify reaction pathways over different catalysts. Information obtained from these studies provides the foundation for designing innovative catalysts.

    Applied studies focus specific catalytic processes. For these projects, continuously operated flow reactor systems are designed. Different catalysts are tested for reactivity, selectivity and stability and the influence of the operating conditions is investigated. Catalyst deactivation is studied in detail to develop suitable regeneration methods or to avoid deactivation entirely by improved catalyst design. Specific projects include hydrodeoxygenation of pyrolysis oils, selective hydration of polyols, conversion of sugars into lactic acid and ethylene glycol, and selective oxidation of methane.

    An important goal of Sievers’ research is to enable technology for utilization of alternative resources in order to reduce the current dependence of oil. Among these biomass is a particularly promising candidate because it is renewable and can be produced CO2 neutral.

    Sievers has contributed to 80 peer reviewed publications on heterogeneous catalysis in petroleum refining (isobutane/2-butene alkylation, fluid catalytic cracking, hydrotreating), alkane activation, supported ionic liquid as catalysts for fine chemical synthesis, and biomass processing.  He is Director and Past President of the Southeastern Catalysis Society, former Program Chair and Director of the ACS Division of Catalysis Technology & Engineering, former Director of the AIChE Division of Catalysis and Reaction Engineering, and Editor of Applied Catalysis A: General.

    carsten.sievers@chbe.gatech.edu

    404.385.7685

    Office Location:
    ES&T 2218

    ChBE Profile Page

  • Sievers Research Group
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
    • Biobased Materials
    • Biochemicals
    • Biorefining
    • Biotechnology
    • Fuels & Chemical Processing
    • Hydrogen Production
    • Materials for Energy
    • Pulp Paper Packaging & Tissue
    • Sustainable Manufacturing
    Additional Research:
    Biomass; Biofuels; Catalysis; Advanced Characterization; Gasification; Biorefining; Lignin Upgrading; Catalysis; Energy & Water; Separation Technologies; Chemical Feedstocks; Sugars; Lignin & Hemicellulose

    IRI Connections:

    Hailong Chen

    Hailong Chen

    Hailong Chen

    Associate Professor, Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering
    BBISS Co-lead: Clean Energy Resources

    The research in Chen Group is cross-disciplinary, bridging mechanical engineering, chemistry, and materials science, focusing on electrochemical energy storage related materials and devices, as well as functional and structural metals/alloys. The technical expertise of the group include development and application of advance in situ characterization methods for energy storage devices, computation-aided materials design and novel synthesis methods for nanostructured materials.

    hailong.chen@me.gatech.edu

    404.385.5598

    Office Location:
    Love 329

    nanoACES

  • ME Profile Page
  • BBISS Initiative Lead Project - Sustainable Resources for Clean Energy
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
    • Materials and Nanotechnology
    • Materials for Energy
    Additional Research:
    Materials Design, in situ characterization, energy conversion and Storage, batteries, and functional materials

    IRI Connections:

    Thomas Orlando

    Thomas Orlando

    Thomas Orlando

    Professor, School of Chemistry and Biochemistry
    SEI Senior Advisor: Energy Minor

    Our group is primarily a surface chemistry and physics group which focuses on the use of high-powered pulsed lasers, low-energy electron scattering, micro-plasmas, mass spectrometry and ultrahigh vacuum surface science techniques. We use this "tool-set" as well as some scattering theory to unravel the details of non-thermal processes occurring under a variety of non-equilibrium conditions. Our group is based upon an interdisciplinary approach and thus our research programs span the realm of fundamental investigations in molecular physics, surface physics and chemistry, bio-physics, bio-polymer formation under pre-biotic conditions as well as working in applied areas of relevance to analytical technique developments, atmospheric chemistry, catalysis and molecular hydrogen generation.

    thomas.orlando@chemistry.gatech.edu

    404.894.4012

    Office Location:
    MoSE G209C

    Chem & BioChem Profile Page

  • Electron and Photon Induced Chemistry on Surfaces Lab
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
    • Conventional Energy
    • Materials and Nanotechnology
    • Molecular, Cellular and Tissue Biomechanics
    Additional Research:
    Surfaces and Interfaces; Catalysis; Advanced Characterization; Hydrogen; Nuclear

    IRI Connections:

    Juan-Pablo Correa-Baena

    Juan-Pablo Correa-Baena

    Juan-Pablo Correa-Baena

    Assistant Professor
    IMS/SEI Initiative Lead: Materials for Solar Energy Harvesting and Conversion

    Juan-Pablo Correa-Baena is an Assistant Professor and the Goizueta Junior Faculty Rotating Chair in the School of Materials Science and Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, USA.

    His group focuses on understanding and control of crystallographic structure and effects on electronic dynamics at the nanoscale of low-cost semiconductors for optoelectronic applications. Juan-Pablo’s group works on advanced deposition techniques, with emphasis on low-cost and high throughput, as well as advanced characterization methods that include synchrotron-based mapping and imaging approaches with nanoscale resolution.

    His research program at Georgia Tech has attracted funding from the Department of Energy and the Department of Defense, which funds cutting-edge research on new materials for solar energy conversion.

    His work has been cited over 28,000 times (h-index of 59) making him a top cited researcher as recognized by the Web of Science Group, Highly Cited Researchers-cross-field (2019, 2021) and Chemistry (2020), and Nature Index, Leading early career researcher in materials science (2019).

    jpcorrea@gatech.edu

    Departmental Bio

  • 2023 Initiative Lead Profile
  • University, College, and School/Department

    IRI Connections:

    Matthew McDowell

    Matthew McDowell

    Matthew McDowell

    Associate Professor, Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering
    Woodruff Faculty Fellow
    IMat Initiative Lead | Materials for Energy Storage
    SEI Lead: Energy Storage

    Matthew McDowell joined Georgia Tech in the fall of 2015 as an assistant professor with a joint appointment in the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering and the School of Materials Science and Engineering. Prior to this appointment, he was a postdoctoral scholar in the Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering at the California Institute of Technology. McDowell received his Ph.D. in 2013 from the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at Stanford University.

    McDowell’s research group focuses on understanding how materials for energy and electronic devices change and transform during operation, and how these transformations impact properties. The group uses in situ experimental techniques to probe materials transformations under realistic conditions. The fundamental scientific advances made by the group guide the engineering of materials for breakthrough new devices. Current projects in the group are focused on i) electrode materials for alkali ion batteries, ii) materials for solid-state batteries, iii) interfaces in chalcogenide materials for electronics and catalysis, and iv) new methods for creating nanostructured metals.

    mattmcdowell@gatech.edu

    404.894.8341

    Office Location:
    MRDC 4408

    McDowell Lab

  • MSE Profile Page
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
    • Conventional Energy
    • Electronic Materials
    • Hydrogen Production
    • Use & Conservation
    Additional Research:
    Batteries; Nanostructured Materials; Composites; Fabrication; Energy Storage; Thermal Systems

    IRI Connections: