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Dear friends and
supporters of USC Chemical Engineering:

Thank you for visiting our department
via this web site. We all take great pride in our education and
research programs, and invite prospective students, parents, and
alumni to visit us in person!
This past year, our incoming
undergraduate class was 41 students with an average SAT 0f 1290. At
the graduate level, we enrolled 16 new students in the fall of 2005.
We graduated 11 PhD students in 2004 and 8 students in 2005, placing
us among the top 25 departments in the country in terms of PhD
graduates. Also, our total research expenditures for the year placed
us 19th among Chemical Engineering Departments
nationally, according to the annual report prepared by the National
Science Foundation. Our undergraduate and graduate students are
achieving considerable success, both as individuals as well as
teams. Our Kathryn Johnson was named a Goldwater Fellow, while Karen
Wigal, Jason Owens, and John Bedenbaugh were winners of Tau Beta Pi
Fellowships.
Chemical Engineering is in the middle
of all of the major university initiatives, including Future Fuels,
Nanotechnology, Biomedical Research, and Undergraduate Research. We
continue to operate the NSF Industry/University Cooperative Research
Center for Fuel Cells, which now has over 15 industrial members. We
have received major grants from DoD and DOE in the areas of solid
oxide fuel cells, hydrogen storage, and polymer nanocomposites, to
list just a few. One of the biggest changes this year came in the
area of biomedical engineering. We received approval in March 2006
to begin offering B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in Biomedical
Engineering, in a partnership with Mechanical Engineering and the
School of Medicine. We welcomed our first class of 27 B.S. students
this fall, and they are now enrolled in their first course, BMEN
101, Professional Development and Ethics for Biomedical Engineers.
Dr. Branko Popov was named a Carolina
Distinguished Professor, a high honor indeed. This year, Professor
John Weidner won the university’s Golden Key Award for Creative
Integration of Research and Undergraduate Teaching. We are about to
retire this award; John joins a long line of winners including Vince
Van Brunt, Michael Amiridis, Chris Williams, and Mike Matthews.
Professor Ed Gatzke was named an Associate Editor for Automatica.
Friends and alumni will want to note
that Professor Joseph Gibbons retired at the end of May 2006, after
42 years of teaching at the University of South Carolina. He stepped
down as the longest-serving faculty member on the entire campus!
Joe’s office is still on the third floor and he is still active in
development and alumni relations. I invite you back to campus to
visit with him!
We are embarking on a program to
increase our visibility by putting a new and personal face on the
profession of chemical engineering. I invite you to watch for
changes and great accomplishments. As always, we are indebted to
you, our alumni and friends, for your support. We welcome your
suggestions and guidance.
With appreciation,
Mike Matthews Professor and Chair |