Next Meeting: Tuesday, October 21st (Annual Meeting)

Annual Meeting - For each of our Section's past Annual Meetings, we had a global leader examine either the the past or future of chemical engineering and offer views of what we can expect of the field or how a chemical engineer can lead in other areas affecting the wider world.



Speaker
: Dr. Stuart Kurtz.

Topic: “Is Engineering a Scientific Endeavor?”

Bio:
Stuart Kurtz graduated from MIT with an S.B. in Chemical Engineering, and from Princeton with an M.S. degree in Polymer Engineering followed by an M.A. and Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering. He taught at RPI in Chemical Engineering, and in Brazil as Professor Titular in Materials Engineering. This was followed by a career in industry accumulating around 30 patents and numerous papers and several awards. No longer obliged to earn a living, he focuses on Philosophy and Science, and climbing mountains because they are there.

Abstract:
Applied Science, technology and engineering have often been characterized as inferior to pure science, and as merely the application of principles learned from science. What is missed in this characterization is the creativity, inventiveness, vision and skills that are required to make engineering enterprises succeed.

Science and engineering make progress sometimes along different lines, and for different reasons and sometimes they overlap to a considerable extent. The differences and similarities of science and engineering might suggest that there a mutual ecology that is necessary for both.

This talk will focus on clarifying the practices of both science and engineering, and why they are in fact separate disciplines.

When: Tuesday, October 21, 2014, 5:30 - 8:00 pm (5:30-6:30 pm: Networking & Buffet Dinner; 6:30-8:00 pm: Presentation) Annual Meeting.

Where
: Ukrainian East Village Restaurant is located at 140 Second Ave (just south of East 9th Street), Manhattan. Please pre-register to gain access to this meeting. Map

Costs:
for Networking, Buffet, and Presentation. Register Now.
• $30 for AIChE, Metro NY Members; • $40 for Non-Members / Guests;
• $10 for Master’s or Graduate Students;
• free for first 40
Undergraduate Students (Students RSVP). After first 40 undergraduates, $5 fee. Pay now.

If you are not a Member of this Section, you can apply the $10 additional amount paid as a Guest to a full Membership for 2014-15. Please notify Treasurer Joel Kirman that you wish to be a Member. Register Now.

Past Annual Meeting Speakers
:
2013 -
For last year’s Annual Meeting, we had Dr. James Wei, Emeritus Professor and former Dean, School of Engineering and Applied Science at Princeton University, and the Author of “Great Inventions that Changed the World” explore the role of inventors and inventions in fueling innovation and global advancement.

Great Inventions
Bio: Dr. James Wei, received his Bachelor’s degree in Chemical Engineering from Georgia Institute of Technology in 1952, M.S. and Sc.D. in Chemical Engineering from MIT in 1954 and 1955 (with a minor in Fine Arts from Harvard). He also has a degree in Advanced Management from Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration in 1969.

He began his career as a Research Chemical Engineer for Mobil Oil Research in 1955, and advanced to Manager of Long-Range Analysis by 1969. From 1971-1977, he was the Allan P. Colburn Professor of Chemical Engineering at the University of Delaware. He joined MIT in 1977 where he served as Department Head of Chemical Engineering until 1988, and was the Warren K. Lewis Professor from 1977-1991. Between 1991 and 2002, he was Dean of Engineering and Applied Science at Princeton University. From 1991-2010, he was also Pomeroy and Betty Perry Smith Professor of Chemical Engineering at Princeton University. He is now Emeritus Professor.

Dr. Wei has published more than 130 research papers on chemical kinetics, catalysis, reaction engineering, and cancer chemotherapy. He is the author of many books, including “Product Engineering” with Oxford University Press in 2007, and “Great Inventions that Changed the World” with John Wiley in 2012.

He served as the president of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers in 1988. Among Dr. Wei's honors are: Award in Petroleum Chemistry from the American Chemical Society, 1966; Professional Progress Award from American Institute of Chemical Engineers, 1970; Member of the National Academy of Engineering, 1978; William H. Walker Award of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, 1980; Member of American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1982; Member of Academia Sinica, 1982. He was designated one of thirty "Eminent Chemical Engineers," at the AIChE Diamond Jubilee Meeting, 1983; and Founders Award of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers for contributions to the profession, 1990. He was chosen as one of “One Hundred Chemical Engineers of the Modern Era”, at the Centennial Celebration of the AIChE in 2008.


2012 -
For 2012, Dr. Morton Lippman, a global expert in this topic, examine the fields of human-exposure assessment and air-pollution health effects. Download flyer.
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Bio: Dr. Morton Lippmann, Professor in the Dept. of Environmental Medicine at NYU's School of Medicine. Dr. Lippmann is a leader in the fields of human-exposure assessment and air-pollution health effects. Winner of the 2012 Cooper Union's Alumni Award - Gano Dunn Award for Engineering (see photo above of Dr. Lippmann accepting the Gano Dunn Award) based on his outstanding contribution to the field of environmental health. As a scientist with national and international recognition, Dr. Lippmann has conducted rigorous research studies to improve our understanding of the health effects of air pollution.

2011 - Annual Meeting Speaker, John K. Smith, Associate Professor of History at Lehigh University, examined the question What are chemical engineers and why do we need them?

Sources: Google Books and Ai Control Systems
Bio: Prof. John K. Smith, Associate Professor of History at Lehigh University. Professor Smith received a B.S. in chemical engineering and B.A. in history for the University of Delaware, an M.S. in chemical engineering from the University of Virginia, and a Ph.D. in history from the University of Delaware. Before becoming a historian, Prof. Smith worked as a chemical engineer at W.L. Gore and Associates and Air Products and Chemicals. He is the co-author of Science and Corporate Strategy, Du Pont R&D, 1902-1980. He has also written a number of articles on research and innovation in the chemical industry, and is currently working on a book entitled Octane: The Search for Better Gasoline and Cleaner Air.

2010 - At our First Annual Meeting Speaker, AIChE Executive Director explored The Future of Chemical Engineering just one year after the AIChE celebrated its own one hundredth anniversary.

Source: Washington Univ. in St. Louis Dept. of Energy, Environmental & Chemical Engineering (WUSTL)

Bio: June Wispelwey is the Executive Director at the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE). Before she became AIChE Executive Director, Ms. Wispelwey served as Executive Director of the Society for Biological Engineering, overseeing its successful launch and growth. Previously, she served as Vice President of Marketing Services at Aventis Behring, and as Director of Performance Chemicals Business Development at Lyondell. After earning a Bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering at Princeton University and a Master’s degree in chemical engineering at the University of Pennsylvania, June began her career at Lyondell. She also completed an executive education program at the Wharton School.
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Presentations now available from May 2013’s Seventh Annual Energy & Resources Conference
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Outreach: AIChE, Metro New York Section at the 10th Annual Engineering Expo on April 7th at White Plains High School. (www.beanengineer.org):

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