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| Spring 2000 issue | . | Solvent solver: Joan Brennecke | |
LINKS: Notre Dame's Department of Chemical Engineering
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Joan F. Brenneckes research interests supercritical fluid
technology and thermodynamics are not the stuff of everyday conversation, but their
implications could make a lot of manufacturing processes safer for workers and more benign
to the environment. "In general," she says, "what I work on is looking for
substitutes for the normal solvents used in industry."Shes talking about things like benzene, perchloroethylene, acetone and hexane, commonly used in applications ranging from dry cleaning to decaffeinating coffee and extracting soybean oil out of soybeans. Their drawback is a high degree of volatility some are flammable, some have been linked to increased cancer rates, most are oxidized in the atmosphere to form carbon dioxide, adding a greenhouse gas linked to global warming. Working with solvents, says Brennecke, "even if youre careful youre still going to end up with some of them escaping into the atmosphere where people will breath them. So theres a big push for alternatives." Paradoxically, one of the alternatives this professor of chemical engineering has been exploring in her laboratory is carbon dioxide not ordinary CO2, however, but supercritical carbon dioxide, a state where the CO2 is a single phase compressible fluid. Using this material as a solvent, she says, "is environmentally benign. Were not adding any carbon dioxide to the atmosphere; were just taking it from the atmosphere and using it in a process. Theres no net accumulation of CO2." A related focus of Brenneckes research is ionic liquids salts that are liquid at room temperature and dont vaporize. In a recent article in Nature, Brennecke called these liquids potentially good solvents, but noted: "Once the reaction is complete, we need to get the chemical product out of the ionic liquid in pure form." Thats a problem she has been investigating with graduate students and colleagues at Notre Dame and researchers at the University of Pittsburgh. "Now were saying," says Brennecke of this research, "that we can design ionic liquids so theyll give us the separation properties we want. This is a very important advance." A member of Notre Dames faculty since 1989, Brennecke has been honored with a National Science Foundation Presidential Young Investigator Award. Shes also the recipient of a Special Presidential Award from Notre Dame for her classroom teaching, graduate student mentoring, research and service efforts to the University and the chemical engineering profession. |
Photo by Rob Finch | |
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