2019 Swanson School Summary of Faculty Research

Page 54

CHEMICAL & PETROLEUM ENGINEERING

Tagbo Niepa, PhD Assistant Professor

926 Benedum Hall | 3700 O’Hara Street | Pittsburgh, PA 15261 P: 412-383-4265 tniepa@pitt.edu

Dr. Niepa is an Assistant Professor of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering with an expertise in microbial interactions with biointerfaces. He received a PhD in Chemical Engineering with honors from Syracuse University, focusing on electrochemical treatment of surfaceattached and drug-resistant bacteria. Upon graduating, He joined the University of Pennsylvania as a Postdoctoral Fellow for Academic Diversity. At UPenn, he worked with Professors Kathleen Stebe and Daeyeon Lee in Chemical and

Biomolecular Engineering, in collaboration with Professor Mark Goulian in Biology to develop new methods to study microbial dynamics in artificial microniches. He deciphered the interfacial properties of bacterial films at oil-water interfaces. This expertise provides a platform for him to make unique contributions to diverse fields ranging from microbialbased methods of oil recovery to the development of technologies having applications for personalized therapeutics, or in high-throughput

screening of currently unculturable microbial communities relevant to biotechnology and drug discovery. His efforts in bioelectrochemistry led to the design of patent winning technologies for controlling of microbial pathophysiology with bioelectrical systems. Also, Dr. Niepa is a co-founder of Helios Innovative Technologies Inc. (now PurpleSun Inc.), a medical device company that develops automated sterilization systems to fight bacterial cross-contamination and hospital acquired-infections.

Research Interests Our mission is to decipher how the interfacial properties of materials affect the physiological response of microorganisms and thereby develop new strategies to minimize the deleterious and optimize the beneficial activities of cells. The physicochemical mechanisms that regulate microbial growth in various settings remain poorly understood for reasons linked not only to the versatility of the microorganisms but also to the challenge of designing new platforms to study or control them. Our translational research program elucidates these mechanisms by developing sustainable control strategies for microbes relevant to health, industry and the environment. We are pursuing three interrelated research thrusts to: (1) Eliminate pathogenic microbial communities (biofilms) associated with implantable devices using conductive-substrate interfaces; (2) Model pathogenic and beneficial microbial communities (microbiomes) in artificial microniches made of soft biomaterial; and (3) Control beneficial interfacial biofilms using surface active compounds. Building upon the understanding of the electrophysiology of highly drug-tolerant bacteria to cure chronic infections, we target the design of alternative ways to control microbial persistence and pathogenicity with conductive-substrates incorporated in medical devices. In our second thrust, we develop porous, semi-permeable or polyelectrolyte membranes (soft nanomaterials) for biotechnological applications. We direct their metabolic activity towards desired ends, e.g., the creation of new materials and bioproducts. Finally, our third thrust addresses interfacial phenomena influencing the metabolic activity of bacteria at fluid interfaces. By characterizing the interfacial and metabolic properties of bacterial films, we aim to elaborate new surface-active molecules to prevent the biodeterioration of economically relevant food and pharmaceutical products, while promoting crude oil remediation.

54

DEPARTMENT OF CHEMICAL AND PETROLEUM ENGINEERING


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Wei Xiong, PhD, D.Eng

37min
pages 127-146

Jörg M.K. Wiezorek, PhD

2min
page 126

Guofeng Wang, PhD

2min
page 125

Jeffrey Vipperman, PhD

2min
page 124

Albert C. To, PhD

1min
page 123

Inanc Senocak, PhD

1min
page 121

Patrick Smolinski, PhD

1min
page 122

Jung-Kun Lee, PhD

3min
page 117

Ian Nettleship, PhD

2min
page 119

David Schmidt, PhD

2min
page 120

Scott X. Mao, PhD

2min
page 118

Tevis D. B. Jacobs, PhD

1min
page 116

Katherine Hornbostel, PhD

1min
page 115

Daniel G. Cole, PhD, PE

2min
page 114

William W. Clark, PhD

2min
page 113

Heng Ban, PhD, PE

2min
page 110

Minking K. Chyu, PhD

2min
page 112

Markus Chmielus, PhD

1min
page 111

M. Ravi Shankar, PhD

2min
pages 106-108

Jayant Rajgopal, PhD

2min
page 105

Paul W. Leu, PhD

1min
page 102

Lisa M. Maillart, PhD

2min
page 103

Amin Rahimian, PhD

1min
page 104

Youngjae Chun, PhD

3min
page 98

Renee M. Clark, PhD

2min
page 99

Joel M. Haight, PhD, P.E., CIH, CSP

2min
page 100

Daniel R. Jiang, PhD

1min
page 101

Karen M. Bursic, PhD

1min
page 97

Mary Besterfield-Sacre, PhD

2min
page 96

Mostafa Bedewy, PhD

1min
page 95

Minhee Yun, PhD

2min
pages 92-94

Gregory F. Reed, PhD

3min
page 88

Feng Xiong, PhD

2min
page 90

Jun Yang, PhD

3min
page 91

Guangyong Li, PhD

2min
page 86

Inhee Lee, PhD

2min
page 85

Hong Koo Kim, PhD

2min
page 83

Alexis Kwasinski, PhD

2min
page 84

Alex K. Jones, PhD

3min
page 82

Alan D. George, PhD, FIEEE

2min
page 79

Masoud Barati, PhD

2min
page 78

Brandon M. Grainger, PhD

2min
page 80

Mai Abdelhakim, PhD

1min
page 77

Radisav Vidic, PhD

2min
pages 75-76

Piervincenzo Rizzo, PhD

2min
page 73

Aleksandar Stevanovic, PhD, P.E., FASCE

2min
page 74

Carla Ng, PhD

2min
page 72

Lei Fang, PhD

3min
page 65

Alessandro Fascetti, PhD

2min
page 66

Sarah Haig, PhD

2min
page 68

Xu Liang, PhD

2min
page 70

Jeen-Shang Lin, PhD, P.E

2min
page 71

Andrew P. Bunger, PhD

2min
page 64

Melissa Bilec, PhD

2min
page 63

Judith C. Yang, PhD

2min
pages 60-62

Götz Veser, PhD

2min
page 58

Jason E. Shoemaker, PhD

1min
page 56

Tagbo Niepa, PhD

2min
page 54

Christopher E. Wilmer, PhD

1min
page 59

Sachin S. Velankar, PhD

2min
page 57

Giannis Mpourmpakis, PhD

2min
page 53

Badie Morsi, PhD

3min
page 52

James R. McKone, PhD

1min
page 51

Steve R. Little, PhD

2min
page 50

J. Karl Johnson, PhD

2min
page 47

John A. Keith, PhD

2min
page 48

Susan Fullerton, PhD

2min
page 46

Lei Li, PhD

1min
page 49

Robert M. Enick, PhD

2min
page 45

Eric J. Beckman, PhD

2min
page 44

David A. Vorp, PhD

2min
page 37

Jonathan Vande Geest, PhD

1min
page 36

Justin S. Weinbaum, PhD

1min
page 38

Ipsita Banerjee, PhD

2min
page 43

George Stetten, MD, PhD

2min
page 34

Savio L-Y. Woo, PhD, D.Sc., D.Eng

2min
page 39

Gelsy Torres-Oviedo, PhD

3min
page 35

Ioannis Zervantonakis, PhD

2min
pages 40-42

Mark Redfern, PhD

2min
page 29

Spandan Maiti, PhD

2min
page 28

Partha Roy, PhD

2min
page 30

Sanjeev G. Shroff, PhD

2min
page 33

Warren C. Ruder, PhD

1min
page 31

Joseph Thomas Samosky, PhD

2min
page 32

Patrick J. Loughlin, PhD

2min
page 27

Prashant N. Kumta, PhD

2min
page 26

Mangesh Kulkarni, PhD

1min
page 25

Takashi “TK” Kozai, PhD

2min
page 24

Alan D. Hirschman, PhD

1min
page 21

Tamer S. Ibrahim, PhD

5min
page 22

Mark Gartner, PhD

1min
page 20

Bistra Iordanova, PhD

1min
page 23

Richard E. Debski, PhD

1min
page 17

Neeraj J. Gandhi, PhD

2min
page 19

William Federspiel, PhD

2min
page 18

Lance A. Davidson, PhD

2min
page 16

Aaron Batista, PhD

4min
page 9

Rakié Cham, PhD

2min
page 13

Bryan N. Brown, PhD

1min
page 12

Tracy Cui, PhD

2min
page 14

Kurt E. Beschorner, PhD

2min
page 10

Moni Kanchan Datta, PhD

2min
page 15

Harvey Borovetz, PhD

1min
page 11

Steven Abramowitch, PhD

2min
page 8
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