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Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

Thomas Senftle

William Marsh Rice Trustee Associate Professor, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

Member, Ken Kennedy Institute

Public Rice profile source

Average rating

3.6

16 temporary mock ratings

Difficulty

3.4

course-linked average

Courses

5

in seeded sections

Public profile

Research areas

Dr. Senftle’s research focuses on the development and application of computational modeling tools for assessing complex, multi-component catalysts at both the electronic and atomistic level. Emphasis is placed on developing fundamental structure-activity relationships informing the rational design of catalytic systems for efficient energy conversion, storage, and utilization. Novel catalytic processes will play a central role in improving the efficiency of low-carbon technologies, such as the utilization of fossil resources with fuel cells, or the electro-chemical processing of H2O and CO2 to produce fuels. Successful heterogeneous catalysts must feature complex surface morphologies, as multiple functionalities are required to achieve conversion that is both active and selective. Applying classical- and quantum-scale simulations techniques in tandem is essential for unraveling complex interactions occurring in such multi-component catalytic systems. Our group’s focus lies in three principle areas: (1) designing photocatalytic electrodes by characterizing the intricate interface between semiconductor surfaces and electrolyte solutions, (2) elucidating the role of strong metal-support interactions impacting the catalytic behavior of oxide-supported metal clusters, and (3) developing accelerated simulation methods tailored to reactive inter-atomic potentials.

Courses taught

CHBE 421

Analysis Of Energy Systems

Building a sustainable modern society requires the development of energy systems that efficiently utilize our natural resources. This course will teach students to apply the core fundamentals of chemical engineering (thermodynamics, reaction chemistry and kinetics, and transport phenomena) in the analysis of both conventional and renewable energy systems. The course will focus on the following topics: (1) the thermodynamic efficiency limits of energy systems, (2) sources of energy in our surroundings (conventional and renewable fuels, solar, wind, hydro, geothermal, etc.), (3) energy storage (batteries, capacitors, thermophysical, mechanical, etc.) and (4) energy utilization (engines, power cycles, fuel cells, etc.). Cross-list: CHBE 521. Recommended Prerequisite(s): CHBE 411

Chemical & Biomolecular EngNone3 credits
3.67.6hSenftle, Thomas

CHBE 495

Undergraduate Research

Discussion of advanced topics of interest. Students will spend time exploring special topics chosen with their advisor, and will participate in weekly discussion groups. The number of credits will vary and are awarded based on total time required to explore the chosen project. Repeatable for Credit.

Chemical & Biomolecular EngNone1-6 credits
3.46.8hAdams, Jason, Ajayan, Pulickel, Alvarez, Pedro, Biswal, Sibani, Chapman, Walter, Gao, Xue, Garcia Camargo, Lucas, Hirasaki, George J., Kampouri, Stavroula, Li, Qilin, MacKintosh, Frederick, Mikos, Antonios, Mohite, Aditya, Pasquali, Matteo, San, Ka-Yiu, Segatori, Laura, Senftle, Thomas, Thyer, Ross, Veiseh, Omid, Verduzco, Rafael, Wang, Haotian, Wong, Michael, Zygourakis, Kyriacos

CHBE 521

Analysis Of Energy Systems

Building a sustainable modern society requires the development of energy systems that efficiently utilize our natural resources. This course will teach students to apply the core fundamentals of chemical engineering (thermodynamics, reaction chemistry and kinetics, and transport phenomena) in the analysis of both conventional and renewable energy systems. The course will focus on the following topics: (1) the thermodynamic efficiency limits of energy systems, (2) sources of energy in our surroundings (conventional and renewable fuels, solar, wind, hydro, geothermal, etc.), (3) energy storage (batteries, capacitors, thermophysical, mechanical, etc.) and (4) energy utilization (engines, power cycles, fuel cells, etc.). Cross-list: CHBE 421.

Chemical & Biomolecular EngNone3 credits
3.511.4hSenftle, Thomas

CHBE 700

M.S. Research And Thesis

Repeatable for Credit.

Chemical & Biomolecular EngNone1-15 credits
3.68.7hAdams, Jason, Biswal, Sibani, Chapman, Walter, Gao, Xue, Li, Qilin, MacKintosh, Frederick, Mohite, Aditya, Senftle, Thomas, Thyer, Ross, Verduzco, Rafael, Wong, Michael

CHBE 800

Graduate Research

Repeatable for Credit.

Chemical & Biomolecular EngNone1-15 credits
3.37.3hAdams, Jason, Ajo-Franklin, Caroline, Alvarez, Pedro, Biswal, Sibani, Chapman, Walter, Firoozabadi, Abbas, Gao, Xue, Kampouri, Stavroula, Kolomeisky, Anatoly, Landes, Christy, Li, Qilin, Lin, Shihong, MacKintosh, Frederick, Marciel, Amanda, Mohite, Aditya, Pasquali, Matteo, Senftle, Thomas, Sholl, David, Silberg, Joff, Singer, Philip, Tabor, Jeffrey, Thyer, Ross, Veiseh, Omid, Verduzco, Rafael, Wang, Haotian, Wong, Michael, Zhang, Yirui Arlene

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