Lecture

VIEST Lectureship: Dr. Gregg Beckham

Thursday February 13, 2025 4:00pm to 5:00pm
Vagelos Laboratory for Energy Science and Technology Room 121
3200 Walnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104

Dr. Gregg Beckham from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) shares his work in the 3rd Vagelos Institute Lectureship in Energy Science and Technology.

Title: Analysis-guided technology development for plastics recycling and redesign

Abstract: The global plastics waste crisis has catalyzed the rapid development and deployment of new technologies that are aimed at enabling circular materials flows for plastics. This talk will cover our collective efforts in the US Department of Energy-funded BOTTLE Consortium (www.bottle.org), where we use analysis-guided research to both enable circularity for today’s hard-to-recycle plastics and redesign tomorrow’s plastics to be both bio-based and inherently circular. Specifically, this talk will highlight BOTTLE’s approach to analysis, where process modeling, techno-economic analysis, and life cycle assessment metrics can be used to prioritize innovation and compare new approaches to incumbent, linear plastics manufacturing and use. Several recent examples from plastics recycling and redesign will be presented that showcase how these analysis tools can guide innovations that address some of the most relevant technical challenges for accelerating plastics recycling and redesign technologies.

Speakers

Gregg Beckham

Group Leader and Senior Research Fellow

National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)

Gregg T. Beckham is a Group Leader and Senior Research Fellow at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). He received his PhD in Chemical Engineering at MIT in 2007. He currently leads and works with an interdisciplinary team of biologists, chemists, and engineers at NREL on conversion of biomass to fuels, plastics upcycling, chemicals and materials included in metabolic engineering, catalysts, fermentation, separations, biopolymer and carbon fiber production, theory and simulation to design biological and chemical catalysts, and lignin and waste valorization.