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Rensselaer Professor Chang Ryu Selected to Receive NSF Career Award
Chang Ryu,
assistant professor of chemistry and chemical biology at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, has been awarded a Faculty Early Career
Development Award (CAREER) from the National Science Foundation
(NSF). Ryu will use the projected five-year, $445,000 grant
to explore new and improved techniques for separating and analyzing
polymers, which are widely used as plastics. Ryu works with
polymers in nano-sized pores to better understand the chemistry
of these materials in the nanoscale environment.
Ryu’s research
has a variety of potential technological applications, including
the purification of complex polymers to create new materials
and the discovery of new ways to separate macromolecules such
as protein and DNA.
“Professor
Ryu’s work will lead to a better understanding of synthetic
polymer adsorption in nanopores with wide-ranging potential
applications to industry,” said Wolf von Maltzahn, acting vice
president for research at Rensselaer. “His research will have
important implications in developing new separation techniques
for biological macromolecules such as proteins and DNA. He is
also committed to involving students at all levels of science
education in his work.”
At Rensselaer,
Ryu will engage undergraduate and graduate students in interdisciplinary
research involving polymer adsorption, high-performance liquid
chromatography, and microscopy. Ryu teaches undergraduate and
graduate-level courses on polymer, physical, materials, and
analytical chemistry.
Ryu also
plans to continue and establish additional community outreach
programs related to nanotechnology and science education. He
is coordinator of the “Bringing Nanotechnology to the Classroom”
program of Rensselaer’s Center for Directed Assembly of Nanostructures,
which gives high school students “hands-on” laboratory experiences
to complement their science education. As part of this program,
Ryu will continue development of the “Virtual Polymer Laboratory”
website he created to provide high school chemistry teachers
with visual teaching modules of wet chemistry experiments and
polymer theories.
The CAREER
Award is given to faculty members at the beginning of their
careers and is one of the NSF's most competitive and prestigious
awards, placing emphasis on high-quality research and novel
education initiatives.
Ryu joined
the Rensselaer faculty in 2000. In addition to his research
through Rensselaer’s Center for Directed Assembly of Nanostructures,
one of only six NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Centers
in the United States, Ryu is also a collaborator on polymer
research associated with the New York State Center for Polymer
Synthesis at Rensselaer. Ryu earned a PhD in chemical engineering
from the University of Minnesota and received master’s and bachelor’s
degrees in chemical technology from Seoul National University
in Korea. See
RPI's News Story.
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