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About the Department

Ultimately, the role of chemical engineers is to apply chemistry, especially biological, organic, and inorganic chemistry. Applying chemistry provides the gasoline, safe drugs, shampoo, textiles, plastics, computer chips, paints, and so many things that make up our everyday lives. To make all these things, chemical engineers combine chemistry, mathematics, physics, biology, economics, management, and computer science. These elements are used together to analyze and design systems, including chemical processes and products.

At UMass Amherst, undergraduate and graduate students learn how to apply sciences to manufacture this "stuff of life" while building the analytical and innovation skills needed to create new solutions. Lectures, computer use, problem-solving in and out of class, laboratory experiences, and intense discussion are all parts of this challenging major. Going beyond the traditional educational environment, our students hone their skills in a model computer classroom and in research supervised by the faculty.

Throughout the world, UMass Chemical Engineering is particularly known for four areas:

  • Multiscale systems analysis and design
  • Materials science and engineering, including polymers
  • Molecular and materials modeling
  • Cellular and metabolic bioengineering

In this website, you will find key information about all aspects of the department, including our faculty and their research interests as well as our teaching programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels. For prospective students, links are provided to detailed information about our undergraduate/graduate programs and admissions procedures. Come to UMass and see!

FACULTY SEARCH

New ISPE Website

 

Location: 159 Goessmann Laboratory
University of Massachusetts
Amherst, MA 01003-3110
(413) 545-2507

Upcoming Events

New Concentration in Biochemical Engineering - click to see more


Distinguished Lecture Series 2007-2008

Upcoming Events
Upcoming seminars


News

Fox News Airs Huber’s Biofuel Research The biofuels research of George Huber of the Chemical Engineering Department was featured in a three-minute piece on Fox 25 News in Boston on August 7. Dr. Huber spent the year juggling a three-ring circus of extraordinary accomplishments. First, he was named the Armstrong Professional Development Professor. Then he chaired a national workshop in Washington entitled “Breaking the Chemical and Engineering Barriers to Lignocellulosic Biofuels” that was attended by 71 top scientists in the field. One outcome from that workshop was the production and distribution of a so-called “roadmap” publication to provide the nation with a clear-cut blueprint for making sustainable fuels an economic reality. Then, to top off his momentous year, Dr. Huber received a coveted CAREER Award of $400,000 from the National Science Foundation to study his revolutionary new method for producing environmentally friendly “green gasoline.”


Forbes Makes the Wall Street Journal Neil Forbes of the Chemical Engineering Department was featured in an August 7th article in the Wall Street Journal As the article by Jared A. Favole said: "While most of the country is trying to avoid salmonella by not eating jalapeno peppers, Dr. Neil Forbes is embracing the bacteria to help fight a deadly disease: cancer. Dr. Forbes, an assistant professor of chemical engineering at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, is arming the toxin to burrow itself into tumors and eat cancer cells. A handful of other researchers across the country are using powerful bacteria, such as salmonella, to target tumors.


Upgrading the Safety and Performance of Rocket Fuel Two researchers in the College of Engineering have received a prestigious $1-million Department of Defense (DoD) grant to boost the safety and performance of fuel used in thousands of satellites, space vehicles, rockets, and missiles. Their task will be to study the spray and combustion of gelled hypergolic propellants. A hypergolic propellant system is formed from a fuel and an oxidizer that ignite spontaneously when mixed so there is no need of an ignition mechanism in order to bring about combustion. David Schmidt of the Mechanical and Industrial Engineering Department and Phillip R. Westmoreland of the Chemical Engineering Department will focus on fluid flow and chemistry, respectively. Read more


Huber Maps a Pathway for Sustainable Liquid Fuels George Huber, the John and Elizabeth Armstrong Professional Development Professor from the Chemical Engineering Department, has produced a 187-page roadmap for making hydrocarbon biofuel – liquid fuel derived from plant biomass – into a viable and sustainable alternative to fossil fuel in this country. The roadmap publication, recently distributed to the press, combines the expertise of some 70 top scientists and engineers in the field of biofuels and is entitled "Breaking the Chemical and Engineering Barriers to Lignocellulosic Biofuels: Next Generation Hydrocarbon Biorefineries." This venture has been covered in many important media outlets around the world, including ABC News, NPR’s Talk of the Nation: Science Friday, CBC Radio, United Press International, CCNews, WESH TV-2 [Orlando, Fla], CNET News.com, Thaindian.com, Greenfield Recorder, Themoneytimes.com [India], Springfield Republican, WFCR, Eponline.com, The Industry Standard, and ScienCentral News. Read more


ChE Newsletter Archive
2006 > Spring | Fall
2007 > Spring | Fall