JUNE 2009 VOLUME XLIII, ISSUE 2 Nacatsoc

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Armor farewell message, 2club news, 4madon receives aiche award, 3ciapetta nominations, 3officers directory, 7NACS NewsletterJ U N E2 0 0 9 VO L U M EX L I I I ,I S S U E2 w w w. n ac at s o c .o r gSummary of San Francisco Meeting ofBoard of Director’s, June 2009As one of my final tasks, Iwould like to provide somehighlights from actionsof your Board of Directors at theirannual meeting in San Francisco. Thefour new Directors-at-Large wereseated (B. Gates, S. Soled, Bob Davis, and Jingguang Chen). The Boarddiscussed the question of creatingstudent chapters in addition to localclubs. The Board encourages undergraduate students to get involvedwith the local catalysis club by contacting any one of the officers or clubrepresentative listed on the NACSwebsite (www.nacatsoc.org).Prior to our elections of officers, we created a newofficer role, that of Lead Trustee, who is in charge of guiding the investments of the Society. Further, in this time ofrapid and electronic communications, most felt that theposition of Foreign Secretary in addition to Secretary wassuperfluous, so we voted to eliminate the office of ForeignSecretary and distribute the work among other officers. Inthis regard, I want to especially thank W. Curt Conner forhis many years of valuable service to the Society in the roleof Foreign Secretary.The Board also agreed to direct our officers to controlexpenses to assure that they don’t exceed our income.There was a unanimous feeling that in supporting a number of educational missions, we, as a Society, should notspend more money than we can earn from investmentsand membership fees.The new NACS officers for 2009-2013 are President,Enrique Iglesia, Vice President, Bruce Cook, Treasurer,CY Chen, Secretary, H-X Li, Communications Director,Edrick Morales, and John Byrne, Lead Trustee.The Board agreed to make it standard policy in futuremeetings (as has been the case for the last 2 NAM meetings) that recording meeting events through audiovisualor photographic methods is prohibited at all NAM eventswithout consent of the presenter. Also, since dues collection and timely lists of local club officers is critical to theyearly operation of the NACS, payments of local clubyearly student awards will be conditioned upon having acurrent membership list and up-to-date dues payments.The meeting Chair (Galen Fisher) of the 22ndNAM, operated through the Michigan Catalysis Societysummarized their preparations for the June 2011 meetingin Detroit, Michigan. The Tri-State Club representative,Jürgen Ladebeck, summarized their early efforts in organizing the 23rd NAM meeting in Louisville, Kentucky inJune of 2013. With the successful conclusion of the 21stNAM in San Francisco, I want to personally thank the cochairs (Enrique Iglesia, Bruce Gates, and Charlie Wilson)and their organizing committee for their tireless activitiesand their commitment.John Armor

Farewell message from John ArmorIstrongly believe that organizations benefit fromchange of leadership; new blood can inject new ideasand vitality into an organization; I think now is agood time for me to step aside. At the San FranciscoBoard meeting, I made it clear to the Board that I did notwish to continue for another four years as an officer. I haveserved as your President for 8 years and as Treasurer for 7years; two very demanding, volunteer roles. During this 15year period, I have enjoyed representing and leading theSociety, and I thank you all for that privilege.I have tried to ensure that another strong suite of officers replaces those who also chose to step aside at the recent round of elections. At the same time I wish to thankthose officers who worked tirelessly with me over thesemany years to improve our organization. The North American Catalysis Society is a strong and sound professionalsociety that has worked hard to enhance the educationalactivities which it seeks to provide the members.I also wish to thank not only the officers, but themany club representatives who worked with me and theBoard to institute many positive changes to our Society.We are much stronger as a professional organization andfinancially very sound; we have a popular website whichNational OfficersPRESIDENTEnrique IglesiaUniversity of California-BerkeleyVICE-PRESIDENTBruce R. CookBP Products NA, Inc.SECRETARYHong-Xin LiZeolyst InternationalTREASURERC. Y. ChenChevron Energy Technology Co.LEAD TRUSTEEJohn W. ByrneBASF Catalysts LLCCOMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOREdrick MoralesLyondellBasell IndustriesPAST PRESIDENTJohn N. ArmorGlobalCatalysis.com LLCClub RepresentativesCanadaFlora NgUniversity of WaterlooChicagoChristopher L. MarshallArgonne National Laboratory2has generated over 150,000 hits overthe past 8 years. In this time, we’vegrown the number of participatingclubs, up-dated the Bylaws, enhancedour national awards, strengthened alarge trust to purse the educationalneeds of the membership (Keith HallEducational Fund), substantiallyincreased the dollar value and numberof student awards, generated a lot ofdocumentation on the history andimportance of catalysis (posted onour website), and initiated many otherpositive steps in growing our Society.I take great pride and thankyou for the honor in serving as yourpast President, and I look forwardto undertaking new tasks to advancecatalytic science in North Americanand globally.John ArmorJune 30, 2009MexicoJosé Antonio de los ReyesUniversidad Autónoma Metropolitana,Campus IztapalapaMichiganGalen B FisherUniversity of MichiganNew England/Foreing SecretaryWilliam C. (Curt) ConnerUniversity of MassachusettsNew YorkIsrael E. WachsLehigh UniversityPacific CoastC. Y. ChenChevron Energy Technology Co.PhiladelphiaAnne M. GaffneyLummus Technology, a CB&I CompanyPittsburgh – ClevelandGötz VeserUniversity of PittsburghOrganic Reactions SocietyChristopher W. JonesGeorgia Institute of TechnologyTri-State (Kentucky/Ohio/West Virginia)Jüergen LadebeckSüd ChemieSoutheastJames G. GoodwinClemson UniversitySouthwestBrendan D. MurrayShell Chemical LPWestern StatesWill MedlinUniversity of Colorado at BoulderDirectors–at–LargeBruce GatesUniversity of California at DavisJingguang G. ChenUniversity of DelawareRobert DavisUniversity of VirginiaStuart SoledExxon Mobil Research and Engineering Co.This Newsletter is a quarterly publication ofThe North American Catalysis SocietyCopyright 2009

Deadline is Nov. 10,2009Nominations open for CiapettaLectureship in CatalysisThe F.G. Ciapetta Lectureship in Catalysis is sponsored by the Davison Chemical Division of W.R.Grace & Company and The North AmericanCatalysis Society. The Society administers this Lectureship. It is awarded biennially in even numbered years. TheAward consists of a plaque and an honorarium of 5,000.Travel expenses are provided (through a travel escrow fundadministered by the NACS) in those unusual instanceswhen such expenses represent a burden that the companyor institution where the contributions were made cannotreasonably assume.The Award is given in recognition of substantialcontributions to one or more areas in the field of catalysiswith emphasis on industrially significant catalysts andcatalytic processes and on the discovery of new catalyticreactions and systems of potentialindustrial importance. The recipient will be selected on the basis ofaccomplishments demonstratedthrough contributions to the catalyticliterature and of the currency of theseachievements. The recipient is expected to present his work at most ofthe affiliated Clubs/Societies during aperiod of two years after the recipientis announced.Selection of the awardee willbe made without regard to age, sex,nationality, or affiliation. The nomination must contain a critical evalua-tion of the significance of candidate’squalifications and a specific statementabout the contribution(s) on whichthe nomination is based. Nominationdocuments (short summary statementof the contributions ( 300 words);curriculum vitae; one nominatingletter and no more than two letters ofsupport) must be sent as a single electronic PDF file to the President ofthe Society (Enrique Iglesia; iglesia@berkeley.edu). Nominations for the2010 Ciapetta Award will close onNovember 10, 2009. Receipt of thenomination will be acknowledged byRostam Madon receives the 2009AIChE Catalysis and ReactionEngineering Practice AwardThe Catalysis and Reaction Engineering (CRE)Division of the American Institute of ChemicalEngineers (AIChE) is delighted to announcethat Rostam J. Madon of BASF Catalysts, LLC has beenselected as the recipient of the AIChE CRE DivisionPractice Award for 2009. This award recognizes individuals who have made pioneering contributions to industrialpractice of catalysis and chemical reaction engineering.The award consists of a plaque and cash award of 1,000to be presented at the Division Reception during theAIChE annual meeting in Nashville, Tennessee. A specialsession will be held in honor of the recipient at the annualmeeting during which he will also present a lecture.Ross Madon has made pioneering contributionsof remarkable breadth and depth to the chemistry andengineering of catalytic processes. Early in his career,he guided the field by addressing artifacts in kineticdata using methods that are accepted today as definitivecriteria for kinetic control in catalysis. In the process, hebrought transition state formalisms for thermodynamically non-ideal systems, first introduced by his advisorMichel Boudart, into the realm of practical catalysis.His contributions to catalyst design for Fischer-Tropschsynthesis and catalytic cracking,two of the most hydrodynamically,kinetically, and molecularly complexreaction systems known, illustrate hisunique ability to contribute conceptsand approaches to systems that othersavoid or merely misinterpret becauseof their complexity. Ross Madonexcels at the interface of chemistryand engineering and his achievementsbridge conceptual advances withcommercial catalysts and catalytictechnologies. Recently, he elucidatedthe mechanism by which vanadiumcauses structural degradation of FCCcatalysts and used this understanding to minimize its deleterious effect.His studies have provided a definiteassessment of the role of ZSM-5additives in FCC to replace inaccurate or phenomenological descriptions of such phenomena. His kinetictreatments of FCC catalysis broughtfundamental chemical insights into asystem once considered too complexfor such rigor. Ross then used theknowledge to go beyond its scholarlyelegance and designed commercial FCC catalysts based on suchprinciples. He is the coinventor anddeveloper of the Reduxion – Maxol family of FCC catalysts and of theIsoPlus and Ultrium families. Hecoinvented the Flex-Tec resid cracking catalyst which has been widelyand successfully deployed in demanding resid cat cracking processes. Hehas thrived in industrial settings, buthis thought process and conceptualapproach is firmly planted in therealm of thoughtful science. He hastackled truly difficult problems andtaken them beyond where otherscould, with elegance and rigor balanced by relevance and impact.3

Clubs & Societies NewsCanadian CatalysisDivisionDr. Michael Baird, Professor Emeritus, Departmentof Chemistry, Queen’s University won the 2009Canadian Catalysis Lectureship Award sponsored bythe Canadian Catalysis Foundation. This award is givenannually to a researcher currently working in Canada.The recipient could either be recognized as a leader ina particular field of catalysis research or someone whohas just completed a new and interesting or controversial piece of work but who is not yet widely recognized.Dr. Baird is recognized for his contributions on theapplication of organometallic chemistry to catalysis. Dr.Baird will be giving lectures at a number of CanadianUniversities in early 2010. Dr. Y. Zheng of the University of New Brunswick is the coordinator for Dr. Baird’slecture tour. Please contact Dr. Zheng at yzheng@unb.ca for details on the dates of Dr. Baird’s visit to variousCanadian Universities.Planning is well underway for the 21st CanadianSymposium on Catalysis, May 9-12, 2010, Banff, Alberta. The conference theme is “Catalyzing a SustainableFuture”. Major theme areas are: Energy, Environment,Nanotechnology, Fundamentals and General Sessions.Please visit the website www.21csc2010.ca for moredetails. Catalysis Club of ChicagoProfessor Tobin Marks from the Department ofChemistry at Northwestern University is the recipient of the 2009 Herman Pines Award in Catalysis. Theaward, sponsored by UOP, the Northwestern Universityand the Catalysis Club of Chicago is presented annuallyat the Spring Symposium Catalysis Club of Chicago.The Award was given in recognition of Professor Marks’soutstanding contributions in the areas of both homogenous and heterogeneous catalysis. Professor Marks’swork has had major impact on contemporary catalyticscience with pioneering studies of olefin polymerization, supported organometallic catalysts, metal-ligandbonding energetics, and f-element catalysis. Prof. Marksreceived a plaque, a cash award and delivered the keynoteaddress entitled “Single- and Multiple-Site CatalyticElectrophiles for the Synthesis of New Materials”.4The CCC 2009-2010 new officer elections were alsoheld during the Spring Symposium. The new officers arelisted on page 7. Catalysis Club ofPhiladelphiaThe winner of the 2009 Catalysis Club of Philadelphia Award is Professor Ted Oyama from VirginiaPolytechnic Institute. Professor Oyama is recognized forhis outstanding contributions and leadership in catalysisresearch. In his early work, he made significant contributions to our understanding of catalytic reactions on metalcarbides, nitrides and oxides. Professor Oyama uses stateof-the-art spectroscopy methods to obtain informationabout catalysis in the working sate. He currently works inthree areas: the oxidative transformation of hydrocarbonsto high-value products, the development of novel catalystsfor the upgrading of petroleum resources and the development of membranes and membrane reactors for the selective separation of gases. The award announcement wasmade at the 2009 Spring Symposium. Professor Oyamawill be honored during his award lecture, scheduled forSeptember, with a plaque and a 1000 cash award.New officers were elected at the April meeting forthe 2009-2010 season. The new officers are listed in theOfficers Directory starting in page 7. Catalysis Society ofMetropolitan New YorkThe Excellence in catalysis award lecture by Dr. Jeffrey T. Miller from Argonne National Labs, Illinoiswas held on May 20th, 2009. His talk was on “EXAFSSpectroscopy in Catalysis Research: Application to GoldCatalysts”. The presentation concentrated upon structural determination and information about the electronicproperties of metal particles and gave examples demonstrating the use of EXAFS to improve the understandingof the steps of Au catalyst preparation, structural changesin bond distance in small particles, evidence for changesin the electronic properties in small nanoparticles, and determination of the reaction mechanism for CO oxidation.

Clubs & Societies NewsWith improved EXAFS capabilities and access to moreusers, the conclusion is that it is possible to solve problemsonly imagined just a few years ago especially for characterization of heterogeneous catalysts.The NYCS 2009-2010 elections were also held onthe same day. The new officers are listed in the OfficersDirectory starting in page 7. Michigan Catalysis SocietyThe Michigan Catalysis Society is delighted to announce that Professor Mark A. Barteau from theUniversity of Delaware, has been selected as the winner ofthe 2009 Michigan Catalysis Society Giuseppe ParravanoMemorial Award for Excellence in Catalysis Researchbased on his groundbreaking contributions to catalysisby metal oxides and transition metals, which led to thedevelopment of fundamental understanding and design ofnovel, improved catalytic materials. Professor Barteau ishighly regarded for his application of surface science andcomputational chemistry techniques to understand surfacereaction mechanisms and design new catalysts.This Parravano Award is given biennially in oddnumbered years to an individual from North America toformally recognize outstanding contributions to catalysisresearch and technology development. The ParravanoAwards are sponsored by the Memorial Trust Fund forProfessor Giuseppe Parravano, which has been established at the Department of Chemical Engineering, TheUniversity of Michigan and administered by the MichiganCatalysis Society.Professor Barteau gave the award lecture at the 31stAnnual Spring Symposium of the Michigan CatalysisSociety: “From Parravano to the present: progress inselective oxidation by metals”. The 31st annual springsymposium organized by Michigan Catalysis Society washeld on Tuesday, May 12th at the University of Michiganin Ann Arbor, Michigan. The one day program includedtwo sessions of oral presentations and a poster session.The symposium featured the Parravano Award Lectureand the Symposium Invited Lecture by Professor WilliamS. Epling from the University of Waterloo on “SpatiallyResolving Reaction Gradients in Monolith-SupportedCatalysts”.Presentations on the new catalytic materials preparation, physico-chemical characterization, and mechanistic studies were given by students and postdoctoralresearchers from University of Michigan, University ofNotre Dame, Michigan State University, University ofWaterloo, Kettering University, Wayne Sate University,Purdue University as well as by researchers from REBResearch & Consulting Co. The Spring Symposiumalso featured a student competition in which DavidIngram from the University of Michigan won the 2009Outstanding Student Presentation Award for his oralpresentation entitled “Exploiting the optical properties ofwell-defined nano-structures for chemical characterization and photo-catalytic applications” and Peter Aurorafrom the same university won the Student Poster Presentation Award for his poster entitled “Titania nanotubesupported nanoscale gold photoanodes for photoelectrochemical hydrogen production”.The society elected new officers for 2009-2010 yearduring the Symposium business meeting. The new officers are listed in the Officers Directory starting in page 8. Organic ReactionsCatalysis SocietyThe Organic Reactions Catalysis Society announcesits Call for Papers in advance of the 23rd ORCSConference March 14-18, 2010 in Monterey, CA. Theabstract submission deadline is Sept 8, 2009 and detailscan be found at www.orcs.org. Additionally, the Societyannounces an agreement with Springer Publishing topublish the proceedings of the 23rd Conference in thejournal, Topics in Catalysis. ORCS has a long traditionof publishing its proceedings in book format as a serviceto the scientific community. Recent surveys of ORCSmembership revealed a desire for greater visibility andelectronic accessibility of the ORCS proceedings. Inresponse, ORCS has forged the agreement with Topics inCatalysis for publication of the proceedings, indexing bymajor abstract services, electronic accessibility of contentthrough Springer’s website and, as a bonus, all ORCSattendees will receive a hard bound issue of the ORCSProceedings. We welcome feedback on this change from5

Clubs & Societies Newsall members (email: chair@orcs.org). Those consideringsubmitting abstracts/manuscripts will be interested toknow that three focus topics will be: catalysis applied tochemical production from biorenewable resources, C-Xcoupling reactions and hydrogenation catalysis. Thesetopics will form the basis for special sessions, in additionto the traditional scope of ORCS conferences.At each biennial conference of the ORCS two technical awards may be conferred by the Society for excellence if the field of catalysis applied to organic products:the Murray Raney Award and the Paul Rylander Award.The latter is an annual award and two awardees may berecognized at the conference. Nominations, comprisinga CV and two supporting letters, are due Sept 8, 2010to chair@orcs.org. Awardees receive an honorarium andtravel expenses and are invited to give a plenary lecture.Details may be found at www.orcs.org.At the 23rd Conference, ORCS will sponsor aneducational course: Hydrogenation: An IndispensibleTool. This three hour course will be presented TuesdayMar 16, 2010 at the conference hotel and will be taughtby leaders from the chemical industry. Course topicsspan heterogeneous and homogeneous catalysis, as wellas, safety in the catalysis laboratory and pilot plants orscale-up laboratories. The course will be provided for anominal fee to conference attendees and is also availableas a one day registration. Interested parties will find moreinformation at www.orcs.org. Pittsburgh-ClevelandCatalysis SocietyThe Pittsburgh-Cleveland Catalysis Society (PCCS)held its Spring Symposium at Pittsburgh Technology Center at Carnegie Mellon University on May 28-29.Craig Barnes of the University of Tennessee delivered thekeynote presentation, Eduardo Lombardo of Universityof Nacional de Litoral in Argentina gave an invited talk,and 12 student presentations were given. Three studentawards were granted for exceptional talks. First place andsecond place awards were given to students working withGoetz Veser at the University of Pittsburgh, includinga first place award to Shuang Liang for his talk titled“Nanostructured Ceria and Lanthana for Water-gas-shift6catalysis” and a second place award to Lu Zhang Whaleyfor her talk titled “High-temperature stable metal-silicacore-shell and yolk-shell materials with exceptional dimensional control.” A second place award was also givento Richard Alesi, working with John Kitchin at CarnegieMellon University, for his talk titled “Evaluating theThermodynamic Properties of Adsorption of CarbonDioxide on Supported Tertiary Amidines.”new slates of officers were elected. The new officersare listed in the Officers Directory starting in page9. AWestern States CatalysisClubThe Western States Catalysis Club held its 2009meeting on April 3 at the Colorado School of Minesin Golden, Colorado. All of the participants, judges andthe Keynote Speaker (Ciapetta lecturer Bob Farrauto)really made the event a success with their presentations ofleading edge catalysis research. Additionally, a great dealof thanks goes to the NACS that allocated 1000 to usfor the meeting, allowing us to help with the registrationsfor 16 students. In all, there were 18 technical presentations and more than 50 attendees.The business meeting included selecting Will Medlin as the club representative to the national organizationand Morris Argyle to continue as treasurer. A great dealof thanks should also be directed to Will, Jim and Morrisfor their service to the club. Finally, it was also decidedduring the business meeting that the 2010 meeting wouldbe in Utah.A panel of judges also assessed all of the presentations for student awards. Because of the numerous verystrong presentations this was a particularly challengingjob. After a very long discussion and analysis of each presentation the judges decided upon the following winners.1st: Mogotu Mogaka (CU)2nd: Eric Petersen (UNM)3rd: Robson Peguin (BYU)Congratulations to all and see you next year!

2009–2010 Officers DirectoryCanadian CatalysisDivisionChairFlora NgUniversity of Waterloofttng@cape.uwaterloo.caVice-ChairAjay DalaiAjay.dalai@usask.caSecretary/TreasurerWilliam EplingUniversity of Waterloowepling@chemengmail.uwaterloo.caPast ChairBryce McGarveyImperial Oil Products Divisionbryce.mcgarvey@esso.caRepresentative to NACSFlora NgUniversity of Waterloofttng@cape.uwaterloo.caCatalysis Club ofChicagoWeb site: www.catalysisclubchcago.orgPresidentDr. Guanghui ZhuUOP LLCguanghui.zhu@uop.comVice President and Program ChairDr. Siddhesh ShevadeBP Americasiddhesh.shevade@BP.comSecretaryRafael AlcalaBP Americarafael.alcala@bp.comTreasurerDr. Wolfgang A. SpiekerUOPwolfgang.spieker@uop.comDirectorDr. Di-Jia LiuArgonne National Laboratoryliud@cmt.anl.govDirectorDr. Manuela SerbanUOP LLCmanuela.serban@uop.comDirectorProfessor Peter C. StairNorthwester Universitypstair@northwestern.eduRepresentative to NACSDr. Christopher L. MarshallArgonne National LaboratoryMarshall@anl.govCatalysis Club of PhiladelphiaWeb site: www.catalysisclubphilly.orgChairMichael A. SmithVillanova Dion VlachosUniversity of Delawarevlachos@udel.eduPast ChairHai-Ying ChenJohnson Mattheychenh@jmusa.comTreasurerSteve H. HarrisLyondellBasell ryBjorn ModenZEOLYST Internationalbjorn.moden@pqcorp.comProgram ChairRaul LoboUniversity of Delawarelobo@udel.eduArrangements ChairBill LonerganUniversity of Delawarelonergan@udel.eduDirectorWei HuangAir Liquidewei.huang@airliquide.comDirectorElizabeth Ross-MedgaardenLyondellBasell .comDirectorJoseph FedeykoJohnson Mattheyfedeyjm@jmusa.comRepresentative to NACSAnne GaffneyLummus Technology, a CB&I Companyagaffney@CBI.comCatalysis Society ofMetropolitan New YorkWeb site: www.nycsweb.orgChairmanWolfgang ReuttingerBASF Catalysts LLC, Iselin, NJwolfgang.ruettinger@basf.comSecretaryJeff YangBASF Catalysts LLC,Iselin,NJjeff.yang@basf.comTreasurerJohn comChairman-ElectMarco CastaldiUniversity of Columbia, NYmc2352@columbia.eduPast ChairmanRuma GhoshLummus Technology a CB& I co., NJrghosh@cbi.comDirectorJohn ByrneBASF Catalysts LLC,Iselin,NJjohn.byrne@basf.comDirectorDave omDirectorDave HarrisBASF Catalysts LLC,Iselin,NJdavid.h.harris@basf.comRepresentative to NACSIsrael WachsLehigh Universityiew0@Lehigh.EDU7

2009–2010 Officers DirectoryMexican Academy ofCatalysisWeb site: http://www.acat.org.mx/PresidentJosé Antonio de los ReyesUniversidad Autónoma Metropolitana, campus Iztapalapajarh@xanum.uam.mxVice-PresidentAlfredo Aguilar ElguezabalCentro de Investigación en Materiales y Martin GuareguaUniversidad Autónoma Metropolitana, campus Azcapotzalcomgnc@xanum.uam.mxSecretaryJulia Aguilar PliegoUniversidad Autónoma Metropolitana, campus Azcapotzalcoapj@correo.azc.uam.mxDirectorsAmelia OlivasUniversidad Nacional Autónoma deMéxicoaolivas@ccmc.unam.mxEstela RamosUniversidad de Guanajuatoramosre@quijote.ugto.mxGilberto TorresUniversidad Juárez Autónoma e to NACSJosé Antonio de los ReyesUniversidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Campus Iztapalapajarh@xanum.uam.mxMichigan CatalysisSocietyPresidentPaul T. FansonToyota Motorpaul.fanson@tema.toyota.comVice PresidentSteven J. SchmiegGeneral Motors Corporationsteven.j.schmieg@gm.com8Past PresidentSuljo LinicUniversity of Michiganlinic@umich.eduSecretary/TreasurerBeata A. KilosThe Dow Chemical CompanyBAKilos@dow.comDirectorJohn HoardUniversity of Michiganhoardjw@umich.eduDirectorSuljo LinicUniversity of Michiganlinic@umich.eduDirectorEric StanglandThe Dow Chemical CompanyEEStangland@dow.comRepresentative to NACSGalen FisherUniversity of Michigangbfisher@umich.eduNew England CatalysisSocietyPresidentTherese CampbellUnited Technologies avi DattaWorcester Polytechnic Inst.rdatta@wpi.eduSecretaryEric AltmanYale Universityeric.altman@yale.eduTreasurerGeorge HuberUniversity of Massachusettshuber@ecs.umass.eduRepresentative to NACSWilliam Curtis ConnerUniversity of Massachusettswconner@ecs.umass.eduOrganic ReactionsCatalysis SocietyWeb site: www.orcs.orgChair, 2010Alan M. AllgeierAmgenallgeier@amgen.comChair-ElectJohn HolladayPacific Northwest National Laboratoryjohn.holladay@pnl.govPast ChairMichael L. PrunierEli Lilly & CompanyPrunier michael@lilly.comSecretary-TreasurerHelene SheaJohnson Matthey Pharma Servicestreasurer@orcs.orgWebmasterSetrak TanielyanSeton Hall Universitywebmaster@orcs.orgNon-North American DirectorJohannes G. de VriesDSMHans-JG.Vries-de@dsm.comDirectors to 2010Bert D. ChandlerTrinity Universitybert.chandler@trinity.eduBaoshu ChenDegussa Catalysts - Evonik DegussaGmbHbaoshu.chen@evonik.comJim WhitePacific Northwest National Laboratoryjim.white@pnl.govDirectors to 2012Michael A McGuireGSK Pharmaceuticalsmichael a mcguire@gsk.comSteve PerriEastman Chemical Companysperri@eastman.com

2009–2010 Officers DirectoryRepresentative to NACSChristopher W. JonesGeorgia Institute of Technologycjones@chbe.gatech.eduPacific Coast CatalysisSocietyChairmanJames HawUniversity of Southern Californiajhaw@usc.eduVice-ChairmanAlex KatzUniversity of California Berkeleyaskatz@berkeley.eduTreasurerKaidong ChenChevron Technology and Marketingkaic@chevron.comSecretaryYong WangPacific Northwest National Labyongwang@pnl.govRepresentative to NACSC.Y. ChenChevron Energy Technology is SocietyWeb site: www.pitt.edu/ gveser/pccs/index.htmlPresidentJim MillerCarnegie Mellon iz PourarianCarnegie Mellon Universityfp23@andrew.cmu.eduTreasurerRobert RiouxPennsylvania State Universityrioux@engr.psu.eduSecretaryMichael JanikPennsylvania State Universitymjanik@psu.eduDirector and Representative toNACSGötz VeserUniversity of Pittsburghgveser@engr.pitt.eduPast PresidentJohn KitchinCarnegie Mellon Universityjkitchin@andrew.cmu.eduSoutheastern CatalysisSocietyPresident/ChairmanDr. Christopher T. WilliamsUniversity of South Carolinawillia84@engr.sc.eduVice President/President-ElectVacantPast President/ChairmanDr. H. Henry LambNorth Carolina State Universitylamb@ncsu.eduSecretaryDr. Steven H. OverburyOak Ridge National Laboratoryoverburysh@ornl.govTreasurerDr. David A. BruceClemson Universitydbruce@clemson.eduDirectorDr. James G. Goodwin, Jr.Clemson Universityjgoodwi@clemson.eduRepresentative to NACSDr. James G. Goodwin, Jr.Clemson Universityjgoodwi@clemson.eduSouthwest CatalysisSocietyChairmanYun-Feng ChangE

AIChE Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Practice Award T he Catalysis and Reaction Engineering (CRE) Division of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) is delighted to announce that Rostam J. Madon of BASF Catalysts, LLC has been selected as the recipient of the AIChE CRE Division Practice Award for 2009. This award recognizes .

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