
Bryan R. Goldsmith
@bryanrgoldsmith
Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering at the University of Michigan. Associate Chair for Graduate Studies. Computational catalysis/materials and ML.
ID: 829773289904074752
http://cheresearch.engin.umich.edu/goldsmith/ 09-02-2017 19:25:43
647 Tweet
2,2K Followers
881 Following


Electrocatalytic hydrogenation of phenol on platinum-cobalt alloys Bryan R. Goldsmith Department of Chemistry, University of Copenhagen sciencedirect.com/science/articl…



Substituent Impact on Quinoxaline Performance and Degradation in Redox Flow Batteries doi.org/10.1021/jacs.3… Michigan Engineering McNeil Group w/ Xun Huan and David Kwabi



Excited to be a judge for the #LatinXChemEng category at #LatinXChem24 on Oct 14-15, a collab category between LatinXChem and LatinX in ChE. Submit your work and win cash prizes for best poster in our category!



According to newly published 2024 graduate program rankings by U.S. News & World Report Michigan Chemical Engineering ranks #7 in the country.




Recent article titled Synergistic Effects in Organic Mixtures for Enhanced Catalytic Hydrogenation and Hydrodeoxygenation. Free link: kwnsfk27.r.eu-west-1.awstrack.me/L0/https:%2F%2… Singh Lab Ankit Mathanker Hoang Tran

#postdocs American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) The Michigan Institute for Computational Discovery and Engineering (MICDE) at the University of Michigan invites you to apply for its prestigious Research Scholar Program (RSP). For Computational Science and Engineering. micde.infoready4.com.


We contributed this work to “J. Karl Johnson Festschrift”. in JPCC. We used an amorphous silica model that his lab developed in order to study WOx/SiO2 for olefin metathesis. pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.10… Pitt ChemE

🚨 Brand new postdoctoral researcher position in my group at Princeton University! Please apply or share with anyone interested in computational materials science and being an electron whisperer! puwebp.princeton.edu/AcadHire/apply….

After a career that spans more than three decades Mark Burns, T.C. Chang Professor of Engineering, has decided to retire. Tonight we celebrated his groundbreaking work in microfluidics, his leadership at University of Michigan, and his legacy of research excellence and academic innovation!



New paper with colleagues from Michigan Chemical Engineering on Distinctive Kinetic Signatures of Surface Segregation Processes in Bimetallic Nanoparticle Catalysis describing how kinetic features of a probe reaction change due to the reaction-induced segregation pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.10…