Clarkson Professor Awarded $422k NSF Grant to Dehalogenate Waste Streams Using Electrical Discharge Plasma

October 3, 2023

Selma Mededovic Thagard, Richard and Helen March Endowed Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering in the Coulter School of Engineering at Clarkson has been awarded a $422k grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for her research project “Plasma-Assisted Dehalogenation of Persistent Halogen-Containing Waste Streams.”

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Headshot, Selma Mededovic

It is estimated that over 50% of all industrial chemicals and polymers, 20% of small molecule drugs and pharmaceutical compounds, and 30% of active compounds in
agrochemistry depend on the chemistry of halogens. Recalcitrance and persistence of organohalogens have resulted in environmental contamination of global proportions; chlorofluorocarbons responsible for ozone depletion, and polyvinylchloride plastics which account for >50% of chlorine in municipal waste are just a few among thousands of chemicals that are pervasive in drinking water and food resources worldwide and as such is harmful to human health and the environment. Dehalogenation of waste streams is at the forefront of the major engineering challenges facing society, as a technology enabling a comprehensive and widely applicable approach to dehalogenation for the 10,000+ organohalogens impacting the environment has yet to be developed.

Mededovic and her team propose plasma-assisted dehalogenation as a disruptive solution to this challenge. The project focuses on probing at a mechanistic level plasma-assisted dehalogenation reaction chemistry and based on these insights develop innovative feedstock-agnostic plasma dehalogenation approaches of which reaction products can be recycled or reused or trace components fully mineralized.

The project runs through 2027.
 

Clarkson University is a proven leader in technological education, research, innovation and sustainable economic development. With its main campus in Potsdam, N.Y., and additional graduate program and research facilities in the Capital Region and Hudson Valley, Clarkson faculty have a direct impact on more than 7,800 students annually through nationally recognized undergraduate and graduate STEM designated degrees in engineering, business, science and health professions; executive education, industry-relevant credentials and K-12 STEM programs. Alumni earn salaries among the top 2% in the nation: one in five already leads in the c-suite. To learn more go to www.clarkson.edu.
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