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Danckwerts Lecture

The P. V. Danckwerts Memorial Lecture was established in 1985 to honor Prof. Peter V. Danckwerts as a leading scholar in the field of chemical engineering and for his contributions as an Executive Editor of Chemical Engineering Science, the second Shell Professor of Chemical Engineering at the University of Cambridge, and a past president of the Institution of Chemical Engineers. The Danckwerts Lecture is co-sponsored by Chemical Engineering Science, IChemE, AIChE, and EFCE, and is presented in alternating years at the ECCE (odd years) and AIChE (even years) annual meetings (even years).

Danckwerts Lecturers 1985 - Present

 

Nielsen

Danckwerts Lecture 2023

 
The 2023 P.V. Danckwerts Memorial Lecture was presented by

Professor Jens Nielsen

BioInnovation Institute, Ole Maaløes Vej 3, 2200 Copenhagen N, Denmark
Department of Biology and Biological Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden

The Danckwerts Lecture was delivered at ECCE14 & ECAB7 held in Berlin, Germany, in September 2023. The title of the presentation was 'Systems Biology of Yeast Metabolism'.

Abstract: Metabolic Engineering relies on a thorough understanding of how the many different metabolic reactions in the cell to be engineered interacts. Genome-scale metabolic models offers a very strong tool for performing quantitative analysis of how the many different reactions in the metabolic network interacts, and through the addition of kinetic and proteome constraints to these models their predictive strength has significantly improved. However, these models can also be used for integrative analysis of quantitative data, e.g. proteomics and metabolomics data. In the lecture there will be presented progress on how kinetic and proteome constraints can improve the predictive strength of genome-scale metabolic models for use in metabolic engineering. Examples will be given of both identification of novel metabolic engineering designs and of using these models for gaining novel insight into the functioning of metabolism.


Doherty-photo

Danckwerts Lecture 2021

 
The 2021 P.V. Danckwerts Memorial Lecture was presented by

Professor Michael F. Doherty


Michael F. Doherty is Duncan & Suzanne Mellichamp Chair in Process Systems Engineering; Professor of Chemical Engineering, and former Department Chair at the University of California, Santa Barbara. 
The Danckwerts Lecture was delivered at ECCE13 & ECAB6 held as a virtual conference in September 2021. The title of the presentation was 'Practice and Science in Continuous Manufacturing of Pharmaceutical'.

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Morbidelli

Danckwerts Lecture 2020

 
The 2020 P.V. Danckwerts Memorial Lecture has been presented by

Professor Massimo Morbidelli


Dipartimento di Chimica, Materiali e Ingegneria Chimica, Politecnico di Milano, Milano, Italy

The Danckwerts Lecture was delivered at the virtual AIChE Annual Meeting 2020 on 16 November 2020. The title of the presentation was 'Integration and Digitalization in the Manufacturing of Therapeutic Proteins'.


Jensen

Danckwerts Lecture 2019

 
The 2019 P.V. Danckwerts Memorial Lecture has been presented by

Professor Klavs F. Jensen

Klavs F. Jensen is Warren K. Lewis Professor in Chemical Engineering and Materials Science and Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. From 2007- July 2015 he was the Head of the Department of Chemical Engineering. He received his MSc in Chemical Engineering from the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) and his Ph.D. in chemical engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

The Danckwerts Lecture was delivered at ECCE12 & ECAB5 in Florence, Italy, in September 2019. The title of the presentation was 'Advancing Chemical Development through Process Intensification, Automation, and Machine Learning'.

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Lee

Danckwerts Lecture 2018

 
The 2018 P.V. Danckwerts Memorial Lecture has been presented by

Professor Sang Yup Lee

The lecture was held at the 2018 AIChE Annual Meeting in October 2018. The title of Professor Lee’s lecture was ‘Biotechnology to Help Achieve the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals’.

Dr. Sang Yup Lee is Distinguished Professor at the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST). He is currently the Dean of KAIST Institutes, Director of BioProcess Engineering Research Center, and Director of Bioinformatics Research Center. He served as a Founding Dean of College of Life Science and Bioengineering.

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Agrawal

Danckwerts Lecture 2017

 
The 2017 P.V. Danckwerts Memorial Lecture has been presented by

Professor Rakesh Agrawal

The lecture took place on 4th October 2017 during the 10th World Congress of Chemical Engineering in Barcelona, Spain. The title of Professor Agrawal’s lecture was ‘Challenges and Opportunities for Chemical Engineering in an Emerging Solar Economy’.

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Lu

Danckwerts Lecture 2016

 
The 2016 P.V. Danckwerts Memorial Lecture has been presented by

Professor G. Q. Max Lu


 


Floudas

Danckwerts Lecture 2015

 
The 2015 P.V. Danckwerts Memorial Lecture has been presented by

Professor Christodoulos A. Floudas

from Texas A & M University, USA.
Professor Floudas, the Erle Nye ‘59 Chair Professor for Engineering Excellence at the Artie McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering at Texas A & M University, is a world-renowned authority in mathematical modelling and optimisation of complex systems.
The Danckwerts Lecture "Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Sequestration: A Multi-scale Grand Challenge" was delivered at ECCE10+ECAB3+EPIC5 in Nice, France on Monday, 28 September 2015.

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2014danckwerts-Titchener-Hooker

Danckwerts Lecture 2014

 
The 2014 P.V. Danckwerts Memorial Lecture has been presented by

Professor Nigel Titchener-Hooker,

head of department of biochemical engineering at University College London (UCL) and director of EPSRC Centre for Innovative Manufacturing of Emerging Macromolecular Therapies at the AIChE Annual Meeting in Atlanta, USA on 17 November.
In his lecture, Titchener-Hooker drew on examples of his work on process miniaturisation at UCL, which he described as "ultra scale down". Case studies of the bioprocess optimisation of operations, including centrifugation and chromatography, were discussed in the context of the latest computational techniques and decision making tools. The lecture made a compelling case for process optimisation and cost reduction via better equipment sizing in multi product facilities.

Download the EFCE press release:

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Glotzer

Danckwerts Lecture 2013

 
The 2013 P.V. Danckwerts Memorial Lecture has been presented by

Dr. Sharon C. Glotzer

of the University of Michigan, USA, internationally recognised with over 160 publications and over 250 invited, keynote and plenary talks on five continents. Re-examining the notion of shape and its role in the bottom-up assembly of new materials, Glotzer's research focuses on the self-assembly of nanoscale systems, looking at entropy, shape and form at a new level, opening doors to brand new creations.
Undoubtedly one of the highlights of a 5-day programme, the lecture entitled "Assembly Engineering: Materials Design for the 21st Century" was delivered at the 9th European Congress of Chemical Engineering in The Hague, The Netherlands on Tuesday, 23 April 2013.

Download the related EFCE press releases:

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Marin

Danckwerts Lecture 2012

 
The 2012 P.V. Danckwerts Memorial Lecture has been presented by

Professor Guy B. Marin,

Universiteit Gent, Belgium . The Lecture, entitled "Chemical Engineering and Kinetics, a 'Pas de Deux' of Theory and Experiment" took place on 29 October 2012 during the Annual AIChE meeting in Pittsburgh, USA.

Guy B. Marin obtained his Masters degree (1976) and his Ph.D. (1980) in Chemical Engineering at Ghent University. He then held a Fulbright fellowship at Stanford University and Catalytica Associates, USA. From 1988 to 1997, he was a full Professor at Eindhoven University of Technology, NL, where he taught reactor analysis and design. He then returned to Ghent University, where he is currently a Professor in Chemical Reaction Engineering.
The main focus of Prof. Marin's research is the investigation of chemical kinetics, targeting the modeling and design of chemical processes and products all the way from molecule up to full scale. His publications include Kinetics of Chemical Reactions: Decoding Complexity with G. Yablonsky (Wiley-VCH, 2011) more than 300 papers in international journals. He is Editor-in-Chief of Advances in Chemical Engineering, Co-Editor of the Chemical Engineering Journal and a member of the editorial board of Applied Catalysis A: General. In 2012 he received an Advanced Research Grant from the European Research Council on "Multiscale Analysis and Design for Process Intensification and Innovation." He chairs the EFCE Working Party on Chemical Reaction Engineering and is an overseas academic "Master" for the "Plan 111" project of the Chinese Government in this field.

He briefly discusses his lecture in the video panel:
http://chenected.aiche.org/video/professor-guy-marin-on-chemical-engineering-kinetics-on-location/

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Arnold

Danckwerts Lecture 2011

 
The 2011 Danckwerts Lecture, entitled "Design by evolution: engineering biology in the 21st century" was given by

Prof. Dr. Frances H. Arnold,

California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, USA, on Tuesday, 27 September 2011 at ECCE8/ECAB1 in Berlin, Germany. 

Frances H. Arnold is Dick and Barbara Dickinson Professor of Chemical Engineering, Bioengineering and Biochemistry at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. Her main research areas are protein engineering, directed evolution, biocatalysis, biological circuit design, and bioenergy. She is a pioneer in the exciting field of directed evolution and strives to elucidate the principles of biological design. Engineering new enzymes using methods of laboratory evolution for bioenergy, green chemistry, or medical applications is a main focus of her work.
Frances H. Arnold is an internationally highly recognized scientist, and this is reflected by numerous awards and honors for her outstanding work. She is the only woman with the rare honor of being elected to all three National Academies in the United States.
Educated in mechanical and aerospace engineering and in chemical engineering, she is now fascinated by biochemistry and bioengineering - interdisciplinarity is more than just a word for Frances Arnold and her research.

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