Joaquín Rodríguez-López is a professor of chemistry at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (UIUC). His research group combines interests in electroanalytical chemistry and energy materials by developing chemically sensitive methods for elucidating the chemistry of batteries, fuel cell materials, electrolyzers, sensors, CO2 capture devices, and many other electrochemical technologies. Recognition to Joaquin’s work has come through awards such as the Zhaowu Tian Prize for Energy Electrochemistry by the International Society of Electrochemistry (2021), The Arthur Findeis Award for Achievements by a Young Analytical Scientist by the ACS DAC (2020), the Society of Electroanalytical Chemistry Royce W. Murray Young Investigator Award (2017), a Toyota-Electrochemical Society Young Investigator Fellowship (2017), and the Sloan Research Fellowship (2016) amongst other awards. His outreach and education have earned him the School of Chemical Sciences Excellence in Teaching Award (2023) and the East Central Illinois ACS Chapter Distinguished Service Award (2016). His work has also been highlighted in the media by The Analytical Scientist as a 40-under-40 investigator (2022) and by Science News 10 Scientists to Watch (2018). Rodríguez-López is a recognized leader in electroanalysis, summing over 120 invited national and international presentations, over 110 publications and book chapters, leadership in large scale energy initiatives, and a thriving electrochemical program that gives back through educational activities such as his staple “Electrochemistry Bootcamp,” which teaches laboratory skills to broad audiences.
Research/Citations
Research group webpage: http://faculty.scs.illinois.edu/rodriguez-lopez/
Google scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=RFe09KwAAAAJ&hl=en
Contact
Page at UIUC: https://chemistry.illinois.edu/joaquinr
Beckman researchers developed a cost-friendly, customizable, electrochemistry robot called the Electrolab to perform autonomous experiments in the laboratory. The Electrolab will be used to explore next-generation energy storage materials and chemical reactions that promote alternative and sustainable energy.
06-Nov-2023 01:05:32 PM EST
Researchers at the Beckman Institute will conduct electrochemical reactions in microdroplets to produce clean hydrogen, sequester carbon dioxide, and store renewable energies like wind and solar inexpensively and sustainably. Their project, called DROPLETS, received $4.5 million from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science through its Energy Earthshots Initiative.
30-Oct-2023 10:05:49 AM EDT
Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign demonstrated a way to use electricity to recycle polyoxymethylene (POM), a form of plastic that’s growing in use but more challenging to recycle.
11-Aug-2023 01:30:40 PM EDT