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Moore named director of Beckman Institute

Jeffrey Moore, the Murchison-Mallory Professor of Chemistry, a professor of materials science and engineering, and a long-time Beckman faculty member, has been named director of the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology, to be effective July 16 pending Board of Trustees approval. 

Published on May 9, 2017

“Jeff’s research expertise, administrative experience, and dedication to Illinois make him the perfect person to lead the Beckman Institute,” said Peter Schiffer, vice chancellor for research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

A Beckman faculty member since 1994, Moore has served as co-chair of Beckman’s Molecular and Electronic Nanostructures theme, and is a member of the Autonomous Materials Systems Group. Moore was recently named a member of the National Academy of Sciences, and, in 2014, was named a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professor. He is also lead primary investigator for the Joint Center for Energy Storage Research (JCESR), a multi-institution research hub funded by the Department of Energy. Moore oversees the hub’s thrust on “Non-Aqueous Redox Flow Batteries.” 

“Having served as interim director for the past year, I'm excited by the wide-ranging research that occurs in the Beckman Institute. Our researchers pursue problems with a team-minded spirit, free from the constraints of traditional academic boundaries,” Moore said. “You see so many examples of mutually beneficial interactions between science and technology here--a powerful way to solve important problems and drive new discoveries.”

The Beckman Institute, home to more than 600 researchers and staff and more than $18 million in external research funding to date in FY16, pursues interdisciplinary research in the physical sciences, computation, biomedical imaging, materials science, biology, behavior, cognition, language and neuroscience.

Moore has published over 400 articles covering topics from technology in the classroom to self-healing polymers, mechanoresponsive materials, and shape-persistent macrocycles. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Chemical Society and the Royal Society of Chemistry, and has received numerous awards for his contributions to teaching and research.

He received his B.S. in chemistry in 1984 and his Ph.D. in materials science in 1989 from Illinois. He was an assistant professor at the University of Michigan before joining the Illinois faculty in 1993.

“Beckman is one of the reasons that Illinois has such a stellar reputation,” Schiffer said. “I have every confidence that Jeff will build on his successful track record to lead the Institute in the coming years.”

“Since 1989, Beckman has been a pioneering example of an academic entity that encouraged faculty to cut across traditional boundaries to address important research problems. The Institute's success, in great part, has paved the way for the global rise of interdisciplinary research environments,” Moore said. “As today's scientific challenges grow in complexity, and as technology moves at ever-faster rates, we must become even more agile and find new ways to foster partnerships with a wider cross-section of the talent on our campus.”

Beckman, which celebrated its 25th anniversary in 2014, works to transcend the limitations inherent in traditional university organizations and structures. The Institute was founded on the premise that reducing the barriers between traditional scientific and technological disciplines can yield research advances that more conventional approaches cannot. Researchers from departments as far-ranging as psychology, computer science, electrical engineering, physics, chemistry, and bioengineering make up Beckman Institute groups. 

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  • Jeffrey S. Moore
    Jeffrey S. Moore's directory photo.

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