Georgia Tech's ChBE 2021 Magazine

Page 14

PhD Student Udita Ringania Wins Blue Sky Award for Sustainability For her research that could help paper and packaging manufacturers advance their sustainability efforts, Udita Ringania was one of three international winners of the 2021 Blue Sky Young Researchers and Innovation Award. Ringania, a fourth-year PhD student in Georgia Tech’s School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, was recognized for her project titled “Dewatering of Cellulose Nanomaterials Using Ultrasound.” Presented every two years, the Blue Sky award is sponsored by the International Council of Forest and Paper Associations (ICFPA), a worldwide network of forest and paper associations. The theme for the 2020-2021 award program was “Boosting the Forest Bioeconomy: Nature-Based Solutions Toward a Lower Carbon Economy.” Ringania’s Blue Sky-winning project began during her first year at Tech when her advisor, Assistant Professor Saad Bhamla, suggested the idea of applying ultrasound to remove water from cellulose after another research team demonstrated an ultrasonic fabric dryer. “The idea stemmed from there,” Ringania explained. “We wondered if we could develop related technology for the paper industry, which uses a lot of energy in the process of removing water.” Industrial Use Ringania, who collaborated with ChBE undergraduate researcher Joseph Harrison on the project, said the ultrasound method would be more sustainable and could be achieved affordably at an industrial scale because the transducers used in the process can be bought cheaply in bulk. As she prepares this research for journal submission, Ringania hopes that the Blue Sky recognition 12

will attract corporate interest. “The pulp and paper industry might be very interested in this technology, and then we can start work on scaling it up,” she says.

Ringania, who was also recently selected to receive a sustainability fellowship from Georgia Tech’s Brooks Byers Institute of Sustainability, earned her master’s degree in chemical engineering at Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, before starting at Georgia Tech. She pursued the master’s to explore whether she liked research before entering a PhD program. Attraction to Tech Part of what attracted her to Georgia Tech was the presence of Bhamla, whose research she’d followed closely since learning about his commitment to “frugal science,” developing high-performance, low-cost, easy-access engineering solutions. Specifically, she had seen his work on creating paper centrifuges for developing areas, where doctors need them for disease diagnosis. “I was persistent in e-mailing

Bhamla about his research before joining Georgia Tech; I knew I wanted to be part of his lab,” Ringania says. “The Bhamla lab is curiositydriven, going wherever our curiosity takes us. We’re trying to solve problems that can have an actual impact in industry and society today.” Community Bond Ringania remembers that her first semester at Georgia Tech was challenging, but she said that the camaraderie of her classmates helped make the transition easier. “We created a strong bond among us,” she said. She became active in the community-building efforts of the Georgia Tech chapter of the Association of Chemical Engineer Graduate Students (AChEGS), serving as the organization’s treasurer in 201920. Ringania, who grew up in Guwahati, India, said she felt shy at first as an international student, concerned that she might not understand colloquial words or references in conversations. “But everyone made me feel so welcome,” she said. “The first semester was not a cultural shock because of the community we have here. You can go talk to professors any time you need to.” Ringania, who married her husband (Vaibhav Gupta) in March 2021, hasn’t decided what career path to pursue after earning her PhD. Initially she was sure she wanted to become a professor, but she has also grown interested in corporate opportunities. “Right now, I’m leaving my options open,” she says. “I haven’t experienced corporate life yet, so an internship might be helpful.”

SCHOOL OF CHEMICAL AND BIOMOLECULAR ENGINEERING, GEORGIA TECH


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Articles inside

Astronaut Scholars

1min
page 15

Student Honors

1min
page 15

Udita Ringania Wins Blue Sky Award for Sustainability

4min
page 14

Engineering Alumni Create Reframe App to Reduce Alcohol Abuse

3min
page 13

Alumni Spotlight: Robyn Gatens Named Director of International Space Station

3min
page 12

Julie Champion and Corey Wilson Elected as AIMBE Fellows

1min
page 11

Krista Walton Wins DoE's Ernest Orlando Award

1min
page 11

Faculty News

2min
page 10

Philanthropy in Action: Butryns Establish Endowed Undergraduate Scholarship

2min
page 9

BBQ Lighter, Combined With Microneedles, Sparks Breakthrough in Covid-19 Vaccine Delivery

3min
page 8

Biomolecular Engineer Wins Grant to Make Microorganism-Inspired Machines

1min
page 7

Covid-19 Mask Study Finds Layering, Material Choice Matter

1min
page 7

Efficiency Leap in Separating Para-xylene Using New Carbon Membranes

1min
page 7

Approach Developed to Synthesize Ammonia in Ambient Conditions

1min
page 6

Hydrogel Could Open New Path for Glaucoma Treatment

1min
page 6

$12 Million NSF Grant Will Establish Nationwide Atmospheric Measurement Network

2min
page 5

Christopher Jones Named John F. Brock III School Chair of ChBE

2min
page 3
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