Meet BU’s Newest Engineers to be Named AAAS Fellows

Excerpts from an article by Jessica Colarossi for The Brink

Uday Pal turns moon dust into oxygen, and Catherine Klapperich develops disease diagnostics for low-resource communities

Each year, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) recognizes scientists who have made major contributions to their fields of expertise. As the chaotic and uncertain year of 2020 neared its close, three Boston University researchers joined those ranks as new AAAS fellows, honored and acknowledged for their deep expertise, one in biomedical engineering, one in sustainable energy solutions, and one in clinical psychology. The Brink reached out and asked each of them to reflect on joining the AAAS fellows and the highlights of their research careers.

 

Catherine Klapperich

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Photo courtesy of Klapperich

“AAAS was a very stabilizing group to be a part of over the past four years as science and facts have been under attack at the highest levels of leadership,” says Catherine Klapperich, a College of Engineering professor of biomedical engineering, materials science and engineering and mechanical engineering, and director of BU’s Precision Diagnostics Center. Klapperich is recognized by AAAS for the advances she’s made in developing diagnostic tools for global and women’s health.

While earning her PhD in mechanical engineering, Klapperich worked on materials used in total joint replacements. “That work got me really interested in how biology and man-made materials interact at the molecular level,” she says.

Klapperich’s research career has largely focused on making portable point-of-care diagnostic devices that are easy to operate outside hospital settings. In particular, she has been passionate about engineering technologies that improve healthcare for vulnerable populations, especially women, who live in low-resource areas. One such focus area has been developing portable diagnostics for sexually transmitted diseases, which if left undetected and untreated can have devastating or even fatal health consequences for women and teenage girls in poor communities.

In the last year, Klapperich and her team’s focus shifted to a new threat, one that hit Boston, and the world, like a tsunami. While the city was overwhelmed in spring 2020 with coronavirus infections, her lab began laying the groundwork for BU’s COVID-19 testing program, leading the charge to set up the BU Clinical Testing Laboratory, where thousands of nasal swabs from students, faculty, and other BU community members are tested each day for the presence of SARS-CoV-2.

“I am proud of the last six months of work building the BU Clinical Testing Laboratory,” Klapperich says. “That project brought together everything that I have learned in my career about engineering large systems with small, interlocking parts.”

 

Uday Pal

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Photo by Vernon Doucette

“I am honored and delighted to be included among this distinguished group of scholars,” says Uday Pal, a College of Engineering professor of mechanical engineering and of materials science and engineering, who is recognized by the AAAS for his research on green energy production, storage, and materials.

Pal’s lab focuses on green engineering, designing new processes and products that can reduce pollution, promote sustainability, and minimize risks to human health and the environment.

He and his team have developed an energy-efficient process for producing heavy metals—such as steel, titanium, aluminum, and others—that are needed for countless industries, but the production of which normally takes a steep toll on the environment. While metal production typically emits heat-trapping greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, Pal’s team has devised a method so that the by-product is oxygen gas instead, an improvement for producing metal here on Earth—and in space. In another out-of-this-world innovation, Pal and collaborators at aerospace company Airbus recently designed a reactor that extracts oxygen from moon dust, which poses a breakthrough for space exploration.

“I remember hearing a phrase, ‘the Stone Age did not end because we ran out of stones,’” Pal says. “I hope that we similarly stop pursuing fossil fuel not because we simply can no longer, but rather we have found better and cleaner ways to generate and store energy.”