1998 AIChE Award
A team of
Chemical Engineering students
from Oklahoma State University
won first place in the 1998
National Student Design
Competition sponsored by the
American Institute of Chemical
Engineers (AIChE). The student
team members were Richard Bruce,
Brian Callihan, and Sean
Hockersmith, all seniors.

Their challenge was to design
a process to recover solvents
from a process that makes
siloxane. Since the solvents
included acetonitrile and
toluene, process safety, zero
emissions, and recovery purity
were primary design issues. Of
course, process costs and
investment economics had to
work, too. The design challenge
was authored by engineers in
industry and was based on an
operating process. The panel of
judges included experienced
chemical engineers from both
industry and academe. So,
success in the competition
indicates that the students were
able to integrate all of the
industrial practice issues as
well as properly apply the
fundamentals.
There are about 150 AIChE
student chapters in the US. All
are eligible to submit design
solutions, with the decision to
submit, or not to, made by the
professor of the chemical
engineering design course. This
year, 28 teams submitted entries
in the competition. We are very
proud of our first place
winners.
Yes, there is a prize for the
winning team. Thanks to alumni
contributions, Richard, Brian,
and Sean had an expense-paid
trip to the 1998 AIChE Annual
Meeting, in Miami, Florida (so
far so good), where they
officially received the William
A. Cunningham Award and got to
present their design solution to
a national body of engineers and
professors (That’s a prize?!).
Brian Callihan will continue
his studies in chemical
engineering. He entered the
graduate program at Oklahoma
State University in January.
Richard Bruce will start a
MD/PhD program at the University
of Oklahoma. Sean Hockersmith
will finish his B.S. this coming
May, and has been accepted into
the OSU Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering Program.
This is the fourth year of
the annual team competition. It
is a relatively new category to
the long-standing AIChE
individual design competitions.
The team competition emphasizes
cooperation and integration and
requires students to work on a
more comprehensive challenge.
Wining is our tradition. The
1995 OSU Chemical Engineering
team of Ulrike Krause, Jamie
Simons, and Janet Wilson also
took first place in the AIChE
Student Design competition. Our
students have won two of the
four, 50%, of the national team
competitions! And, before them,
OSU ChE Seniors had won several
of the individual national
design competitions.
“Design” is the “capstone”
put-it-all-together exercise
that characterizes the practice
of chemical engineering. Why are
OSU students so successful? We
think that there are many
reasons. Their “Design” course
professors, Rob Whiteley and Jan
Wagner, are dedicated to the
students’ growth, share over 15
years of industrial experience,
and give the students great
coaching; but, the students did
it themselves. We also believe
that the entire OSU experience
can be credited. Throughout the
curriculum, our professors
reinforce excellence in the
fundamentals, an application
perspective, team effectiveness,
and the value system to get it
right.
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