Type: Club News
Club: Southeastern Catalysis Society (SECS)
The Southeastern Catalysis Society (SECS) held its 24th Annual Symposium at Virginia Tech in the Data and Decision Sciences Building in Blacksburg, VA, on March 9th and 10th, 2026. The meeting began on Monday morning with an invited lecture from Dr. Gina Noh (Penn State), entitled “Structure-function relationships toward stable catalysts for atom-efficient reactions”. The keynote was followed by 9 oral presentations by students and faculty from the region. After lunch on Monday, we had a keynote lecture given by Dr. Yong Wang (Washington State University) who was the recipient of the 2025 Robert Burwell Lectureship in Catalysis administered by the North American Catalysis Society. Dr. Wang’s lecture was titled “Catalysis: Advancing Efficient and Affordable Energy Conversion”. This talk was followed by 6 more student oral presentations. The day was concluded with a poster session featuring 47 contributed posters, followed by a dinner with lively discussions. On Tuesday, March 10th, the Symposium started with an invited presentation from Dr. Guoxiang (Emma) Hu (Georgia Tech), entitled “AI-Accelerated Catalyst Design: From Data-Driven Discovery to Autonomous Design”. Nine oral presentations were given by students and faculty on Tuesday morning.

Student oral and poster presentation competition winners were presented cash awards sponsored by Eastman. Presentation Awards: (in no particular order) Geoffrey Hopping of Georgia Tech with the presentation “Alkyl Chain Solvation Impacts Energy Scaling Relationships of Primary n‑Alcohol Oxidation to Aldehydes on Au Anodes.” Geoffrey is advised by Prof. David Flaherty; Tristan Maxson of The University of Alabama with the presentation “Resolving the CO Puzzle on Surfaces and Nanoparticles with DFT+U.” Tristan is advised by Prof. Tibor Szilvasi; Aaron Frye of NC State with the presentation “Sustainable Alkenyl Benzene Monomer Production through Chemical Looping Oxidative Dehydrogenation.” Aaron is advised by Prof. Fanxing Li. Poster Awards: (in no particular order) Ankit Bansal of Georgia Tech with the poster “Choosing the Right Computational Model for Electrochemical Catalysis: Insights from Hydrogen Evolution on MoS2.” Ankit is advised by Prof. Emma Hu. Maria Victoria Zuniga of the University of Virginia with the poster “Identifying Stable Chlorine-Promoted Silver Surfaces Using Machine-Learning-Accelerated Simulations.” Maria is advised by Prof. Chris Paolucci. Mohammad Ghadiri of Georgia Tech with the poster “Elucidation of the reaction mechanism for C‑C bond formation in the electrochemical reduction of carbonyl Compounds.” Mohammad is advised by Prof. David Flaherty.
The 24th Annual SECS Symposium exhibited a record attendance. A total of 110 scientists and engineers, with attendees from 13 Universities, one national laboratory, and three commercial vendors. Exhibitors at the symposium were Anton Paar and Micromeritics.
The SECS gratefully acknowledges the long-term generous support of the Symposium from Malvern Panalytical, and the NACS. The SECS gratefully acknowledges the financial sponsorship for this year’s symposium: Virginia Tech Department of Chemical Engineering (Platinum-level), UVA Chemical Engineering and Virginia Tech Research and Innovation (Gold-level), Anton Paar and Johnson Matthey (Silver-level). Poster awards were sponsored by the Chemical Engineering Journal (Elsevier).
