Thomas R. Baruch '60 gift to launch research on
cutting-edge sources of solar energy
Troy N.Y. – Thomas R. Baruch, a member of the Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute Board of Trustees and alumnus of the
Class of 1960, has donated a gift that will help to establish a
new center at the Institute devoted to bio-energy research. The
new center — the Baruch '60 Center for Biochemical Solar Energy
Research — will conduct unprecedented research on biochemical
solar technology.
Researchers at the center will work to develop the next
generation of solar technology by studying one of the most
powerful energy converting machines in world – plants.
Researchers will use sophisticated new technologies and
techniques to understand the energy converting power of plants
to develop new technologies that mimic this extremely efficient
natural system.
"We are grateful to have a partner in Tom Baruch who fully
understands the vision of The Rensselaer Plan, and the
pressing need to pursue visionary and innovative efforts to
develop new approaches to energy security around the world,"
said Rensselaer President Shirley Ann Jackson. "The center will
expand the energy research network that Rensselaer is actively
building across the Institute, and will offer researchers
around the globe fundamental scientific research on the
original solar panel – plants – as well as technological
solutions to create the super-efficient man-made solar
technologies of the future."
"It is my hope that this center will expand on Rensselaer's
very strong foundation in energy research and establish
Rensselaer and its faculty and students as leaders at the
forefront of solar energy research," Baruch said. "The research
talent and infrastructure of Rensselaer create the perfect
storm of ideas and innovations that I believe will result in
the creation of solar technologies with greater efficiency of
even the most sophisticated silicon solar panels available on
the market today."
The center will include faculty from a variety of
disciplines and research backgrounds. In the initial stages,
the research will center on molecular chemistry and
biochemistry to map out the step-by-step processes that
nature's perfect green machines go through to convert solar
rays into life-sustaining energy, according to Rensselaer
Provost Robert Palazzo. "The research will begin by looking at
the processes that plants use to intake and utilize the energy
from the sun at such an amazing level of efficiency," he said.
"This scientific knowledge could provide other Rensselaer
scientists and engineers information to develop new
technologies that present an entirely new means of harnessing
energy from the sun."
Jonathan Dordick, director of the Center for Biotechnology
and Interdisciplinary Studies and a chemical engineer, also
envisions strong possibilities for entirely new forms of
light-capturing technologies. "Ultimately, biomimetic designs
will be integrated with nature's biological machinery to
provide scalable, efficient, and broadly applicable systems
that convert light into usable and storable energy. This has
the potential to revolutionize future energy generation and
secure our future as a safe and sustainable society."
K.V. Lakshmi, assistant professor of chemistry and chemical
biology, will help lead the effort at the center to capture the
extremely complex reactions of photosynthesis in action, which
is a vital first step in the research process. One of the
recipients of the first-ever federal Department of Energy (DOE)
funding for the investigation of biochemical solar power,
Lakshmi is working with fellow assistant professors of
chemistry and chemical biology James Kempf, an expert in
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) techniques, to understand how
the inner workings of the plant protein complex transforms
light into power through photosynthesis. Their colleagues,
including assistant professor of chemistry and chemical biology
and molecular chemist Peter Dinolfo, as well as faculty in
disciplines from biology to chemical engineering will use this
foundational knowledge to build synthetic replications of the
natural systems to capture and move light energy. William
Weightman Walker Chair of Chemistry and Chemical Biology Linda
McGown will also be involved in the management of the
center.
"There is absolutely no doubt that the single most daunting
problem that is facing this country and the world is energy
independence and security," Lakshmi said. "Solar energy
conversion is an important area of research with unbelievable
implications for the future. We need transformational science,
on the interface of chemistry, biology and physics, to create
new technological innovations for solar energy utilization that
represent the great convergence of the 21st century."
Thomas Baruch is founder and managing director of CMEA
Ventures. He began his investment career at the Battelle
Development Corporation and then at Exxon Corporation. Tom
formed CMEA Ventures with New Enterprise Associates (NEA) in
1989 after previously having founded and served as CEO of
Microwave Technology Inc., a supplier of gallium arsenide
integrated circuits and value-added sub-systems. Tom currently
heads up CMEA Ventures' energy and materials investments. He
currently serves as the chairman of the board of materials and
energy companies including: Codexis Inc., Cnano Technologies,
Intermolecular, and Wildcat Discovery Technologies. Baruch also
currently serves on the boards of Biolight, Entropic
Communications (ENTR), Exela, Luminus Devices, Newpath, and
Solyndra.
Baruch holds an engineering degree from Rensselaer and a
Juris Doctor degree from Capital University. He joined the
Rensselaer Board of Trustees in October 2002. He is also a
member of the board of trustees of the Berkeley Institute for
Synthetic Biology (BISB) and the board of trustees of That Man
May See Foundation.