CBE Energy Seminar: Jillian Goldfarb (Cornell CBE)
Location
Olin Hall 165
Description
Bio:
Jillian Goldfarb is an Associate Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at Cornell University. She received her Ph.D. from Brown University in chemical engineering in 2008 and B.S. in chemical engineering from Northeastern University in 2004. Research in the Goldfarb group tackles critical "last mile" issues surrounding renewable fuel production from in situ catalysis during thermochemical conversion of biomass to byproduct valorization and technology-policy integration. Work spans fundamental science all the way to large-scale industry collaborations to scale up pyrolysis biofuel production. Her novel concepts for the integrated biorefinery go beyond converting biomass to biofuels. They also produce their own biofuel upgrading and pollution prevention materials by utilizing carbonaceous and heterogeneous organic-inorganic residues remaining after thermochemical conversions.
Her NSF CAREER Award pushed her biorefinery work into the area of Hydrothermal Liquefaction (HTL). One of the advantages of HTL over other biomass conversion techniques is the direct treatment of wet wastes without an energy-intensive pre-drying step. To date, the majority of HTL research explores the impact of process conditions on products produced from a range of feedstocks. However, this approach cannot overcome the primary challenges to widespread application of HTL for biofuels, namely that (1) we cannot accurately control or predict product distributions, which subsequently requires significant downstream upgrading of the biocrude, and (2) the resulting process water requires considerable treatment, making large scale HTL economically infeasible. Controlling hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) requires us to treat it not as a series of reactions, but rather as a reactive process by which we form supersaturated solutions of aqueous-organic mixtures and a separate organic biocrude. Taking a fundamental thermodynamic approach to HTL and product recovery could accelerate our transition to a renewable energy future by facilitating the design of more efficient and selective HTL processes.
Beyond the biorefinery, Prof. Goldfarb tackles the design of sustainable materials for water treatment and other environmental applications using computational modeling integrated with experimental fabrication and characterization. She and her collaborators developed and validated a new framework on heterogeneous hierarchical porous media for point-of-use water treatment. Using greener fabrication methods (solvent recycling loops, bio-templating and low-temperature processes) we are designing polymer foam scaffolds with high light penetration and water permeability into which we embed photocatalytically active nanocomposites for the destruction of organic pollutants in water.
Prof. Goldfarb is committed to furthering scientists’ efforts toward public communication and research translation. Outside of the lab, she studies the public’s understanding and willingness to adopt sustainable energy solutions and explores the factors that increase or decrease the public’s willingness to accept a given technology, a critical component driving policy-making. Her work on public understanding of COVID-19 vaccination has been published in the New England Journal of Medicine, and was discussed by Dr. Anthony Fauci at a White House Press Briefing.