ÃÛÌÒ½´Chemist Wins Prestigious NSF Career Award

NSF honors Chemistry Prof. Brent Sumerlin with funding for nanotechnology research and community outreach.

chemistry lab
Brent Sumerlin in his chemistry lab at SMU
Brent Sumerlin

ÃÛÌÒ½´chemist Brent Sumerlin has earned a National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development Award, given to junior faculty members who exemplify the role of teacher-scholars in American colleges and universities.

Sumerlin, assistant professor in the Dedman College Department of Chemisty, will receive $475,000 over five years for two related nanotechnology research projects – one with potential biomedical applications, and the other with a promising advanced materials application.  The prestigious award also includes support for education outreach, and Sumerlin’s will fund a program for K-12 school districts and community colleges to help prepare and attract underrepresented minority students for ÃÛÌÒ½´chemistry internship positions.

"As a teacher, as a scientist, and through his community outreach and service, Professor Sumerlin exemplifies the finest scholarly tradition," said Cordelia Candelaria, dean of Dedman College of Humanities and Sciences. "His work is dedicated to expanding minds through exposure to basic science, including a generous willingness to share his lessons and labs off campus with teachers and students in elementary, middle and high school classrooms.  Dedman College is thrilled by NSF’s recognition of Brent’s achievements."

Sumerlin, 32, works with an ÃÛÌÒ½´team of postdoctoral research associates, graduate and undergraduate students who fuse the fields of polymer, organic and biochemistries to develop novel materials with composite properties. "This award enhances what I do at the university level and what I can do through ÃÛÌÒ½´for the rest of the community," Sumerlin said.

The first part of Sumerlin’s NSF-funded research will investigate how nano-scale polymer particles can be triggered to come apart in response to a chemical stimulus. One of the potential applications of the technology is an automatic treatment solution for diabetics – one that would release insulin from tiny polymer spheres when they encounter dangerous levels of glucose in the bloodstream.

"Researchers worldwide are looking toward methods of insulin delivery that will relieve diabetics of frequent blood-sugar monitoring and injections," Sumerlin said.

The second aspect of the project involves making polymers with the ability to come apart and put themselves back together again – a technique that Sumerlin believes can be used to construct materials that are self-repairing. "We could potentially think about coatings for airplane wings that are damaged by debris during flight," Sumerlin said. "After landing, we could quickly treat the coating, causing it to re-form itself."

Sumerlin received his doctorate from the University of ÃÛÌÒ½´Mississippi in 2003, accepted a position as visiting assistant professor at Carnegie Mellon University for the next two years and joined ÃÛÌÒ½´in 2005.

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