Ames, Iowa
September 5, 2008The
National Science Foundation
has awarded Iowa State University and its research partners a
five-year, $18.5 million grant to establish the NSF Engineering
Research Center for Biorenewable Chemicals based at Iowa State.
The award is part of the
National Science Foundation's Generation Three
Engineering Research Centers (ERC) Program. The
third-generation Engineering Research Centers are designed to
create university and industry partnerships in research and
education that promote innovation, transform engineered systems,
advance technology and produce engineering graduates who can
creatively contribute to U.S. competitive advantage in a global
economy.
"This is an exciting
development for Iowa State University," said Iowa State
President Gregory Geoffroy. "The National Science Foundation's
decision to establish a third-generation Engineering Research
Center on our campus is a great endorsement of the work our
faculty, staff and students have been doing in biorenewable
technologies. And the new Engineering Research Center for
Biorenewable Chemicals is a tremendous opportunity for Iowa
State to work with partners in the United States and Europe to
create a culture of innovation that can develop a sustainable
chemical industry."
The goal of Iowa State's NSF
Engineering Research Center for Biorenewable Chemicals (CBiRC)
is to develop technologies that can transform today's
petroleum-based chemical industry into an industry based on
plants and other biorenewables. The center's focus will be to
develop catalysts that promote the chemical reactions that can
efficiently produce biorenewable chemicals. A unique strategy
will be to integrate two research communities that haven't been
working together: those studying biocatalytic technologies and
those studying chemical catalytic technologies.
Another objective of the center
is to educate undergraduate and graduate students to be
creative, innovative engineers who can function in a global
economy. The center aims to do that by exposing students to
multidisciplinary research that can advance the production of
biorenewable chemicals. Through international partnerships
students will gain experience working in teams with faculty and
students from other cultures. They will gain exposure to
entrepreneurship and innovation through partnerships with
industry, including startup companies and venture capitalists.
The center's education efforts will also include programs for
pre-college students and teachers that bring engineering
concepts into their classrooms to stimulate students to study
engineering and science.
The National Science Foundation
is launching five Engineering Research Centers this year. The
foundation's initial grants support five years of work: $3.25
million in year one, $3.5 million in year two, $3.75 million in
year three, $4 million in year four and $4 million in year five.
The centers may apply for a renewal that could extend the
foundation's support another five years. After 10 years, the
centers are to be self supporting.
Iowa State University --
through the Office of the Executive Vice President and Provost,
the Office of the Vice President for Research and Economic
Development and the colleges of engineering, agriculture and
life sciences, and liberal arts and sciences -- is also
committing $600,000 per year for the center.
Iowa State will lead the ten
institutions affiliated with CBiRC. Brent Shanks, an Iowa State
professor of chemical and biological engineering, will be its
director and Basil Nikolau, the Frances M. Craig Professor in
the departments of biochemistry, biophysics and molecular
biology and food science and human nutrition, will be the deputy
director. Another 16 Iowa State faculty members are expected to
be affiliated with the center.
Shanks said the state of Iowa
and university leaders made it possible for the project team to
successfully compete for one of the research centers. He said
investments in the university's
Bioeconomy Institute
and its Plant
Sciences Institute helped attract the faculty and research
capabilities necessary for the new center.
"It takes a lot of people
pulling together and commitments at a lot of levels to make
something like this happen," Shanks said.
James Bernard, an Iowa State
Anson Marston Distinguished Professor in Engineering and interim
dean of Iowa State's College of Engineering, said winning the
science foundation's support "is a strong affirmation of our
commitment to researching the science and developing the
technologies that will produce a sustainable and prosperous
future. The complexities of the problems we face are enormous,
from climate change to sustainable infrastructure. Their
solution will come from interdisciplinary and
inter-institutional collaborations such as the new NSF
Engineering Research Center for Biorenewable Chemicals."
CBiRC's academic partners are
the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, Rice University in
Houston, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the University of
Virginia in Charlottesville and the University of California,
Irvine. Affiliated faculty will also come from the University of
Michigan in Ann Arbor and the Salk Institute for Biological
Studies in San Diego. International partners are the
Fritz-Haber-Institute of the Max-Planck-Society in Berlin,
Germany, and the Technical University of Denmark in Lyngby. The
center will also develop pre-college programs with Des Moines
Public Schools and the Heartland Area Education Agency in
Johnston. And the center will develop partnerships with industry
as well as start-up companies through Iowa State's Pappajohn
Center for Entrepreneurship and venture capital firms Khosla
Ventures and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers.
Lynn Preston, a deputy division
director at the National Science Foundation and leader of the
Engineering Research Centers Program, said "NSF is delighted to
welcome Iowa State University into the ERC 'family.' CBiRC will
contribute to the knowledge and technology platforms needed to
develop chemicals from biorenewable feedstocks. The key
technological backbone of the greater than $400 billion chemical
industry is the suite of catalyst systems that facilitate the
conversion of feedstock chemicals into the desired chemical
products. One way to safeguard the future sustainability of the
economy is to ensure that these feedstocks are based on
renewable resources, not petroleum. We look forward to CBiRC
graduates joining the next generation of leaders and innovators
in building a sustainable chemical industry for the U.S."
The Engineering Research
Centers Program was established in 1984 at the request of the
White House and the National Academy of Engineering. The first
generation of 19 centers, established between 1985 and 1990,
focused on developing technological systems and the expansion of
design and manufacturing studies in engineering education. The
second generation of 24 centers, established from 1994 to 2006,
focused on developing engineered systems that could transform
industrial processes and products.
Shanks, a former employee of
Shell Chemicals, said it will take a lot of research, education
and training to develop a sustainable and biorenewable chemical
industry.
The petrochemical industry has
been developing catalysts and other technologies for producing
fuels and chemicals from fossil fuel molecules for about 80
years, he said. Researchers working with bio-based molecules are
just starting to develop the catalysts and technologies
necessary to produce chemicals. |