| One of
the world’s leading scientists in nanotechnogy and fuel-cell research will
join the University of South Carolina’s faculty in 2008.
Dr.
Brian Benicewicz, the director of the New York State Center for Polymer
Synthesis and a professor of chemistry at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,
will be the holder of the endowed chair in the Center of Economic Excellence
for Polymer Nanocomposite Research. His hiring is part of the S.C. Center
of Economic Excellence (CoEE) program, which was established to fuel economic
development by using state funding to create research centers at the state’s
three research universities.
Benicewicz, whose research team will
be located in the Horizon I building of Innovista, the university’s research
district, will enhance the university’s research strength in two key areas:
polymer nanocomposites and future fuels.
“Dr. Benicewicz joins the university
at a time when our research reputation is growing,” said Dr. Harris Pastides,
the university’s vice president for research and health sciences. “The
addition of the Center of Economic Excellence for Polymer Nanocomposite
Research will enable the university to play a leading role in the future
of nanoscience and plastics, the largest manufacturing industry in South
Carolina.”
The Palmetto State is one of the
nation’s top producers of plastics, specifically commodity polymers that
are used to manufacture packaging products for items such as juices, water,
soft drinks, household cleaners and cosmetics. The university and plastics
manufacturers have been working since 2002 to study the competitive advantage
that nanoscience may offer in developing new products or improving those
that already exist.
“Polymer-nanocomposite research is
key to the economic development of South Carolina,” Dr. Tom Vogt, director
of the university’s Nanocenter, said. “Bringing Dr. Benicewicz and his
research team to the university is a major move forward for an industry
that plays such a critical role in the Palmetto State’s job market and
economy.”
Benicewicz, whose research funding
includes grants from the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department
of Energy and private industry, also will collaborate with researchers
in the university’s College of Engineering and Computing, a leader in alternative-fuels
research and home to the nation’s only Industry/University Cooperative
Research Center for Fuel Cells funded by the National Science Foundation.
Benicewicz said he was attracted
to the university because its leadership is creating a research and teaching
environment that will positively impact the university and the state for
many years.
“This vision for the future, combined
with the outstanding faculty and students I met during my visits, were
the primary factors in my decision to join the University of South Carolina,”
he said. “My research is focused in two major areas that overlap with key
research directions of the university: polymer nanocomposites and new polymers
for fuel-cell membranes. The opportunity to work with other top researchers
in these areas at South Carolina is very exciting and will push our research
in new directions.”
Dr. Gordon Calundann, the chief technology
officer at BASF Fuel Cell GmbH/Inc. in Somerset, N.J., said Benicewicz’s
move to the University of South Carolina is a “triple-win event.”
“The university, with its powerful
and still-developing infrastructure in fuel-cell technology, now adds to
this growing capability the nation’s leading academic researcher and laboratory
in high-temperature polymer electrolyte membranes,” Calundann said.
“With Dr. Benicewicz, the University
of South Carolina adds a world-class synthetic-polymer scientist to its
already distinguished staff in the alternative-energy field,” he said.
“Finally, and perhaps most important from my viewpoint, this move can only
aid and accelerate the commercialization of fuel-cell products developed
by BASF.”
In his leadership role as the endowed
chair of the Center of Economic Excellence in Polymer Nanocomposite Research,
Benicewicz will position the university as an internationally recognized
center of research and education and help it pursue collaborations with
businesses and industries in South Carolina, Dr. Mary Anne Fitzpatrick,
dean of the university’s College of Arts and Sciences, said.
“The college is proud to be selected
for a center that is expected to advance the state’s economy through its
research, and ultimately, create jobs through the application and commercialization
of Dr. Benicewicz’s research,” Fitzpatrick said. “Dr. Benicewicz is another
example of the excellent faculty whom we are bringing to the college and
the university to work with our outstanding faculty.”
The S.C. CoEE program was created
by the S.C. General Assembly in 2002 with $200 million in funding from
the S.C. Education Lottery for the state’s research universities – the
University of South Carolina, Clemson University and the Medical University
of South Carolina. State funding for the centers, which ranges from $2
million to $5 million, must be matched with private, federal or municipal
funds.
The Carnegie Foundation has designated
the University of South Carolina as an institution of “very high research
activity,” the highest distinction awarded to only 62 public research institutions.
University of South Carolina
For two centuries, the University
of South Carolina’s scholarship, research and outreach efforts have contributed
to the greater good of society. With 39,000 students on eight campuses
and more than 350 degree programs -- including law, engineering, public
health and medicine -- and 240,000 living alumni, the university is improving
the lives of individuals in South Carolina and around the world. South
Carolina has received the highest research designation awarded by the Carnegie
Foundation, and the university’s undergraduate international-business program
is ranked best in the nation in U.S. News & World Report.
Dr. Brian Benicewicz
Dr. Brian Benicewicz is the director
of the New York State Center for Polymer Synthesis and a professor of chemistry
and chemical biology at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
He will join the University of South
Carolina in August 2008 as the holder of the endowed chair in the Center
of Economic Excellence for Polymer Nanocomposite Research. He and his research
team will have their laboratory in the Horizon I building of Innovista.
Benicewicz, 53, began his career
at the Celanese Research Co. and was a senior scientist at Ethicon Inc.,
a Johnson & Johnson company. He spent 12 years at the Los Alamos National
Laboratory, where he led a research team studying polymers. He has commercialized
many of his innovations and has collaborated with many high-profile industries,
including Shell Oil, Axiva, Rohm and Hass, and Celanese Ventures. Benicewicz
has a start-up company that is focused on fuel-cell and related hydrogen
technologies.
The New York State Center for Polymer
Synthesis has approximately 20 faculty, as well as a large research unit
comprising undergraduate and graduate students, and focuses on three key
areas: groundbreaking research, collaborations with government and industry
and undergraduate and graduate education.
Benicewicz earned a bachelor’s degree
from the Florida Institute of Technology in 1976 and a doctoral degree
in polymer chemistry from the University of Connecticut in 1980. |