Candidates for Director-at-Large

John N. Armor

John N. Armor

John N. Armor
Semi-retired con­sul­tant
 
Founder of a per­son­al, glob­al con­sult­ing busi­ness, GlobalCatalysis.com. My ded­i­cat­ed inter­ests in catal­y­sis con­tin­ue through occa­sion­al tech­ni­cal pub­li­ca­tions (such as Catal­y­sis Today 178 (2011) 8), invit­ed lec­tures, and atten­dance at major nation­al and inter­na­tion­al catal­y­sis focused meet­ings. I bring over 40 years of expe­ri­ence in catal­y­sis begin­ning with my under­grad­u­ate research at Penn State Uni­ver­si­ty and my PhD work at Stan­ford Uni­ver­si­ty. After receiv­ing my doc­tor­ate degree, I spent 4 years as an assis­tant pro­fes­sor at Boston Uni­ver­si­ty, then joined Allied Chem­i­cal Corporation’s cen­tral research cen­ter for 11 years, and moved to Air Prod­ucts & Chem­i­cals to lead a catal­y­sis research cen­ter before retire­ment.

My past role with the NACS (8 years as Pres­i­dent and 7 years as Trea­sur­er) focused on bring­ing vis­i­bil­i­ty to the catal­y­sis com­mu­ni­ty at large, estab­lish­ing our pop­u­lar web­site, return­ing excess pro­ceeds from our NAM meet­ings to the mem­ber­ship, strength­en­ing the finan­cial posi­tion of the NACS as well as the indi­vid­ual clubs, build­ing up the cor­pus to the Kei­th Hall Edu­ca­tion­al Fund, estab­lish­ing new ways to pro­vide edu­ca­tion­al assis­tance to the mem­ber­ship, and enhanc­ing the num­ber and iden­ti­ty of our pro­fes­sion­al Awards pro­gram.

Hav­ing stepped aside from a lead­er­ship role in the NACS for the last 4 years, I would like to rejoin the Board of Direc­tors and again work for the mem­ber­ship at large. I would like to con­tin­ue to serve as a resource to the Soci­ety by par­tic­i­pa­tion in Board activ­i­ties while men­tor­ing new gen­er­a­tions of our lead­ers, because I believe there is more that I can still con­tribute.
 

Jingguang Chen

Jing­guang Chen

Jing­guang Chen
Thay­er Lind­s­ley Pro­fes­sor of Chem­i­cal Engi­neer­ing
Colum­bia Uni­ver­si­ty
 
Jing­guang Chen start­ed his career at the Exxon Cor­po­rate Research Lab­o­ra­to­ries before join­ing the fac­ul­ty at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Delaware, serv­ing as the Claire LeClaire Pro­fes­sor of chem­i­cal engi­neer­ing and Direc­tor of the Cen­ter for Cat­alyt­ic Sci­ence and Tech­nol­o­gy. In the past two decades he has been active­ly serv­ing the catal­y­sis com­mu­ni­ty, includ­ing the Catal­y­sis Sec­re­tari­at of ACS, Chair of the Gor­don Research Con­fer­ence on Catal­y­sis, Kokes Chair for the Philadel­phia NAM, and co-founder and team leader of the Syn­chro­tron Catal­y­sis Con­sor­tium. He has served as the Direc­tor-at-Large of NACS since 2005. His recent con­tri­bu­tions as DAL includ­ed the appli­ca­tion and dis­tri­b­u­tion of trav­el grants to grad­u­ate stu­dents and young fac­ul­ty to the ICC meet­ing.

If re-elect­ed he would like to help estab­lish a more for­mal process in NACS in apply­ing and grant­i­ng trav­el assis­tance to catal­y­sis con­fer­ences.
 

Abhaya Datye

Abhaya Datye

Abhaya Datye
Dis­tin­guished Regents Pro­fes­sor
Depart­ment of Chem­i­cal & Nuclear Engi­neer­ing
Uni­ver­si­ty of New Mex­i­co
 
Abhaya Datye has been on the fac­ul­ty at the Uni­ver­si­ty of New Mex­i­co since 1984 and present­ly serves as the under­grad­u­ate advi­sor for chem­i­cal engi­neer­ing and for­mer­ly served as Asso­ciate Chair. He serves as Direc­tor of the Cen­ter for Micro­engi­neered Mate­ri­als, a strate­gic research cen­ter at UNM that reports to the Vice Pres­i­dent for Research.

Abhaya received his Ph.D. in chem­i­cal engi­neer­ing from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Michi­gan in 1984. He has authored over 240 pub­li­ca­tions, 3 patents and has pre­sent­ed 120 invit­ed lec­tures around the world. He was the Chair of the Gor­don Research Con­fer­ence on Catal­y­sis in 2010. He served as the pro­gram co-chair for the North Amer­i­can Catal­y­sis Soci­ety meet­ing at Snow­bird, UT. He has been active­ly involved in the West­ern States Catal­y­sis Club, where he has served as pres­i­dent and as the Club rep­re­sen­ta­tive to the NAM board. As a Direc­tor at large for the Soci­ety, he plans to enhance the vis­i­bil­i­ty of catal­y­sis and to get new stu­dents, espe­cial­ly grad­u­ate and under­grad­u­ate stu­dents into the field.

His research group has pio­neered the devel­op­ment of elec­tron microscopy tools for the study of cat­a­lysts. Using mod­el cat­a­lysts, his group has shown metal/support inter­faces can be stud­ied at near atom­ic res­o­lu­tion. His cur­rent work involves the syn­the­sis of biore­new­able chem­i­cals, fun­da­men­tal stud­ies of cat­a­lyst sin­ter­ing, alco­hol reform­ing into H2 and syn­the­sis of nov­el nanos­truc­tured het­ero­ge­neous cat­a­lysts, espe­cial­ly the sta­bi­liza­tion of iso­lat­ed sin­gle atoms on sup­ports. He leads the NSF Part­ner­ship for Inter­na­tion­al Research and Edu­ca­tion (PIRE) on Con­ver­sion of Bio­mass derived reac­tants into Fuels, Chem­i­cals and Mate­ri­als (a col­lab­o­ra­tion between fac­ul­ty and researchers in the US, Den­mark, Ger­many, Nether­lands and Fin­land).