Richard D. Braatz
Richard D. Braatz (born July 19, 1966) is the Edwin R. Gilliland Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology known for his research in control theory and its applications to chemical, pharmaceutical, and materials systems.He has received many honors, including the Hertz Foundation Thesis Prize, the Donald P. Eckman Award and John R. Ragazzini Award from the American Automatic Control Council, the Curtis W. McGraw Research Award from the Engineering Research Council, and the Antonio Ruberti Young Researcher Prize from the Antonio Ruberti Foundation and IEEE Control Systems Society. Braatz became a member of the National Academy of Engineering in 2019. He is a Fellow of the International Federation of Automatic Control, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Braatz graduated from Oregon State University with a B.S. in 1988 with an undergraduate thesis on heat exchanger design supervised by Octave Levenspiel. He worked at Chevron Research and Avery Dennison before receiving his M.S. and Ph.D. in robust control from the California Institute of Technology under the direction of Professor Manfred Morari. His thesis included a proof that robust control problems are NP-hard. After a postdoctoral year at DuPont, he moved to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he rose to the position of millennium chair and professor, with positions in chemical and biomolecular engineering, electrical and computer engineering, mechanical science and engineering, bioengineering, applied mathematics, and computational science and engineering. Braatz made contributions in the areas of robust optimal control, fault detection and diagnosis, sheet and film processes, and crystallization.
After serving as a visiting scholar for a year at Harvard University, in 2010 he moved to MIT's department of chemical engineering, where he continues research in systems and control theory and its applications. Provided by Wikipedia
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7by Tam N.T. Nguyen, Sha Sha, Moo Sun Hong, Andrew J. Maloney, Paul W. Barone, Caleb Neufeld, Jacqueline Wolfrum, Stacy L. Springs, Anthony J. Sinskey, Richard D. BraatzGet full text
Published 2021-06-01
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8by Andreas L. Gimpel, Georgios Katsikis, Sha Sha, Andrew John Maloney, Moo Sun Hong, Tam N.T. Nguyen, Jacqueline Wolfrum, Stacy L. Springs, Anthony J. Sinskey, Scott R. Manalis, Paul W. Barone, Richard D. BraatzGet full text
Published 2021-03-01
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9by Patrick Herring, Chirranjeevi Balaji Gopal, Muratahan Aykol, Joseph H. Montoya, Abraham Anapolsky, Peter M. Attia, William Gent, Jens S. Hummelshøj, Linda Hung, Ha-Kyung Kwon, Patrick Moore, Daniel Schweigert, Kristen A. Severson, Santosh Suram, Zi Yang, Richard D. Braatz, Brian D. StoreyGet full text
Published 2020-01-01
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11by Shen, Dongying ErinOther Authors: “...Richard D. Braatz....”
Published 2018
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12by Molaro, Mark ChristopherOther Authors: “...Richard D. Braatz....”
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13by Foguth, Lucas CharlesOther Authors: “...Richard D. Braatz....”
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14by Zhou, Lifang, Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyOther Authors: “...Richard D. Braatz....”
Published 2016
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16by Severson, Kristen AnnOther Authors: “...Richard D. Braatz....”
Published 2018
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17Multidimensional population balance modeling and optimization of continuous reactive crystallizationby Zhu, Zhilong, Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyOther Authors: “...Richard D. Braatz....”
Published 2018
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18by Zhu, Xiaoxiang, Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyOther Authors: “...Richard D. Braatz....”
Published 2015
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19by Doucette, Hillary.Other Authors: “...Richard D. Braatz and Thomas Roemer....”
Published 2019
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20by Kumar, Ketan.Other Authors: “...Richard D. Braatz and Retsef Levi....”
Published 2020
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