2009-10 Wentz Project
Awardees
Three chemical engineering
undergraduates won funding from
the Lou Wentz Foundation to do
research projects with chemical
engineering or chemistry faculty
members during the 2009-10
academic year. This
prestigious award provides
$4,500 to a student who is
working on a research project.
Competition is open to all
students at OSU, but only 42
were awarded this season.
One of the ChE students,
Maria Vera, will be working for
ChE associate professor Dr.
Sundar Madihally. Another
Lindsey Campbell will work with
ChE assistant professor Dr.
Heather Fahlenkamp. ChE student
Grit Kupgan will be working with
chemistry professor Dr. Nicholas
Materer.

Maria Vera’s project title is
Injectable Hydrogels. She
writes, “The purpose of my
project is to investigate ways
in which injectable hydrogels
can be utilized in order to
provide a minimally invasive
procedure for the replacement of
damaged knee cartilage. During
the project, I plan to test the
biocompatibility as well as the
mechanical strength of a
hydrogel that will mimic
cartilage.”
Maria is from Tulsa, OK, is
presently finishing her
sophomore ChE classes in, and is
in the Honors College as well as
the ChE program. She plans on
entering medical school after
graduation to begin a career in
pediatric ophthalmology.
In addition to success in a
rigorous academic program and
biomedical engineering research,
her photo reveals that she also
enjoys campus life.

Lindsey Campbell is finishing
her freshmen classes, and is one
of the exceptional early
recipients of a Wentz Project.
She started research with Dr.
Fahlenkamp right after arriving
on campus and was one of
nine OSU students to receive the
Women’s Faculty Council
recognition for her
undergraduate research.
Lindsey describes her
project, Characterizing a
Novel Ophthalmic Drug Delivery
System as, "The primary
goal of the project is to
measure drug release rates of a
novel ophthalmic drug delivery
system and compare the rates to
currently used ophthalmic drug
delivery systems, including eye
drops of either a liquid drug
solution or drug-loaded
nanoparticles. I plan to test
the drug loading and release
rate of the lens system and
compare this to the drug-infused
nanoparticles alone."
Lindsey is from Haworth, OK,
and is in the Pre-Medical option
of the Chemical Engineering
program.
Grit Kupgan's project title
is: Molybdenum and tungsten
hydrogen bronze films for
detection of improvised
explosives.

He explains his work as, “Terrorists
typically use Triacetone
Triperoxide (TATP) as their
explosive of choice. Guidelines
for synthesizing this organic
explosive are readily available,
and access to starting materials
such as acetone and hydrogen
peroxide is not difficult.
Therefore, developing TATP
sensors is important. One
possibility for suitable
detector materials are
molybdenum and
tungsten-hydrogen-bronze films
which change properties when
exposed to low concentration of
TATP vapors. The focus of this
project is to determine the
effectiveness of the films as
detector materials."
Grit is a ChE junior,
originally from Bangkok,
Thailand.
To win a Wentz Project award,
the students must write-up their
own research proposal, which is
to reveal their personal
leadership in the investigation
and evaluation. The proposal
must also touch on the relevance
of the research societal issues,
and contribution to the
student’s preparation for
intellectual leadership. Faculty
members, representing a cross
section of OSU academic
programs, review the proposals.
Since the judges might be from
humanities, business, landscape
architecture, entomology, or
theatre, the student proposals
must appeal to a wide audience.
Many of our Wentz Project
recipients make sufficient
progress to publish their work
and to become national
scholarship recipients.
Congratulations and best
wishes for continued success to
Maria and Lindsey; and thanks to
their faculty mentors Sundar
Madihally and Heather
Fahlenkamp, and to the Lou Wentz
Foundation.
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