Ryan Lively Awarded Endowed Term DeLoach Professorship

 

Professor Ryan Lively has been awarded a Thomas C. DeLoach Jr. Endowed Term Professorship in Georgia Tech’s School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering (ChBE).

This term professorship will provide Lively with substantial financial support that he can deploy to explore innovative new research directions, develop new classroom teaching methods, or create new course materials. The professorship will enable him to explore new intellectual pursuits without needing to undertake the burden of acquiring federal or other funding to seed their ideas.

“Ryan’s career has grown on an outstanding trajectory,” said Professor Christopher W. Jones, the John F. Brock III School Chair of ChBE. “He is a creative researcher who demonstrates both great breadth and depth in his work on materials and separation processes.”

Research Focus

Lively’s research group focuses on the creation of novel adsorbent and membrane materials that can provide low energy solutions to some of the world’s most challenging and important separations. He has worked to improve adsorption-based gas separations and has led the experimental and conceptual development of organic solvent reverse osmosis separations.

Innovations in Lively’s work span discovery of new materials, fundamental understanding of adsorption and mass-transfer mechanisms, and development of practical separation systems, including advances in materials manufacturing.

Lively joined the faculty at Georgia Tech in 2013 as an assistant professor, and in the last nine years his research team has produced over 120 papers that have been cited more than 10,000 times according to Google Scholar.

In 2020, Lively won of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers’ (AIChE) Allan P. Colburn Award for Excellence in Publications by a Young Member of the Institute.

When Lively completes his term, the position may be awarded to another outstanding member of the ChBE community, enabling the impact of the DeLoach Faculty Endowment to achieve the broadest possible impact.

“I am thrilled to be honored with the DeLoach Professorship. This will have a positive impact on our lab operations, students, and post-doctoral researchers by providing flexibility to explore new directions for future research topics.”
— Ryan Lively, a professor in the school of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering and director of the SSEC


About the DeLoach Endowment Fund

Established in 2007 by Thomas C. DeLoach Jr., ChE 1969, the Thomas C. DeLoach Jr. Endowment Fund supports eminent teacher-scholars in the School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. The fund was originally designed to support a faculty chair and was previously awarded to Professor Emeritus Dennis Hess. Earlier this year, DeLoach agreed to the School Chair’s request to amend the endowment fund, building in the flexibility for the fund to be used to support two professorships for a term of years.

“In this way, the DeLoach Endowment continues to provide unrestricted funding for ChBE’s exceptional faculty according to the highest needs of the School as we look to the future,” Jones said. “ChBE is fortunate to have the support of a large number of successful alumni and friends who have contributed to the School in support of our students and faculty,”

DeLoach serves as independent director of Asbury Automotive, Inc. He is a former executive of Mobil Corporation (“Mobil”) and served in various positions at Mobil from July 1969 until March 2000. From 1994 to 1998, DeLoach served as the Chief Financial Officer of Mobil, and then served the president of the Global Midstream Division from 1998 to 2000.  From May 2000 to July 2002, DeLoach was a member of management of a NASCAR racing team owned principally by Roger Penske. In September 2002, he formed PIT Instruction & Training, LLC, of which he is a principal and a managing member.

 
Sara Kunicki