Awards

Twelve Faculty are Members of the National Academy of Engineering

Dec 15, 2025 2 minutes

The McKetta Department of Chemical Engineering is home to 12 living members of the National Academy of Engineering, the second-highest count among other Top 10-ranked programs in the nation.

The McKetta Department of Chemical Engineering is home to 12 living members of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE), with seven active faculty and five emeritus faculty members. It is a distinction only bested by MIT, which has 22 living NAE members; 11 active faculty and 11 emeritus. Rounding out the top five programs with living NAE faculty counts include Caltech and Stanford, both with six active and one emeritus NAE member, and Princeton with four active faculty. Also noteworthy is that the noted Texas ChE faculty members make up 12 of the 21 NAE faculty within the overall Cockrell School of Engineering at UT Austin.

The NAE is a prestigious, independent, nonprofit institution that provides expert engineering leadership and advice to the U.S. government and nation, advancing technology and welfare through its peer-elected members—who are the world’s leading engineers from academia, industry, and government. Founded in 1964, it is part of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine and honors engineers for major contributions in practice, research and education, shaping policy and fostering innovation.

For more than six decades, Texas ChE faculty have been elected to the academy in recognition of their pioneering research and innovative applications. Below is a table of all our NAE members and their celebrated accomplishments. 

YEARFACULTY MEMBERRECOGNIZED FOR
2023Benny Freeman, FacultyAdvances in membrane materials for gas separation, water purification, and energy-efficient molecular transport.
2018Brian Korgel, FacultyPioneering work in nanocrystal synthesis and their application in energy, electronics, and advanced materials.
2017David Allen, FacultyAir quality engineering and developing science-based environmental policies, including pioneering methods for measuring industrial emissions.
2014Thomas Edgar, EmeritusMajor contributions to process control, optimization, and chemical process systems engineering education.
2012Joan Brennecke, FacultyGroundbreaking research in ionic liquids and sustainable chemical processes, transforming solvent design for green chemistry.
2011Keith P. Johnston, FacultyContributions to nanoparticle synthesis and supercritical fluid engineering that advanced drug delivery, materials, and energy applications.
2006Nicholas Peppas, FacultyFoundational contributions to biomaterials and drug delivery, including the theory and design of polymer-based therapeutic systems.
2005George Georgiou, FacultyInnovations in protein engineering and biopharmaceutical development, including novel antibody and enzyme therapeutics.
1992C. Grant Willson, EmeritusGroundbreaking work in polymer chemistry and photoresist materials that enabled advances in semiconductor lithography.
1988Don Paul, EmeritusLeadership in polymer science and membrane-based separations, as well as significant contributions to energy and environmental applications.
1987Adam Heller, EmeritusInfluential developments in electrochemistry, including glucose monitoring technologies and advanced energy conversion systems.
1977Isaac Sanchez, EmeritusContributions to polymer thermodynamics and fundamental understanding of polymer-solvent interactions.