Development of the Infrastructure 

Teaching requires instructional materials and laboratories.   Research programs require centers to organize collaborators, to integrate agencies, and to provide funding.   Service activities require a system to transfer technology to the users.   All activities require buildings, information systems, and a sense of community.   These physical materials, procedures, and human partnership comprise the infrastructure through which we contribute to society; and part of our comprehensive mission is to develop this infrastructure – and once more create national leadership.  

We host a variety of social activities that integrate students, faculty, and staff. These include picnics, banquets, golf tournaments, and a monthly pizza night.

The Advanced Technology Research Center is a $35 million, 165,000 sq ft building dedicated exclusively to advanced research and technology development.   It opened for occupancy in the Fall Semester, 1998.   Chemical Engineering is a major participant in the research in this state-of-the-art facility, providing very best in research facilities.

The Chemical Engineering faculty has created several national-level centers for coordinating research and development.   The Measurement and Control Engineering Center is a consortium of about 15 companies sponsoring research and development at the University of Tennessee and Oklahoma State University.   The National Science Foundation and Oak Ridge National Lab jointly sponsor it.   The Ultrapure Water Group is sponsored by microelectronics, domestic water, conventional power, and nuclear power organizations – including US Navy.   The Integrated Petroleum Environmental Consortium manages about $1M per year to sponsor projects aimed at minimizing the environmental of energy production.   Its sponsorship is through the US Environmental Protection Agency.   Finally, the Center for Conversion of Biomass to Fuel-Grade Ethanol, affectionately known as the "grassahol" project, is a joint effort between OSU and the University of Mississippi, which is coordinating research between six departments at three universities toward the production of alternate fuels.

We are newsletter editors and journal editors, we serve as accreditors to other ChE programs, we help manage the national AIChE activities, are advisors to student groups, manage the NTU MS ChE program, serve on national review committees for Fulbright scholars and proposal funding, among other activities.

We are fulfilling our role as a comprehensive university; serving society in multiple ways.