New chemistry building serves as epicenter for cutting-edge research
This article was previously printed in the Fall 2021 issue of .
For Dr. Rebecca Barlag, BS â98, the OHIO experience has meant the narrow halls and dimly lit basement rooms of Clippinger Laboratories. First as a student and now as a professor of instruction, sheâs begun almost every school year in Clippinger 194. But spring semester brought a new traditionâin a new home.
In late 2020, the University wrapped up construction on a 34,000-square-foot Chemistry Building, converting a parking lot near Clippinger and Emeriti Park into a center for groundbreaking learning and research for future generations of scientists and scholars. Standing three stories tall, the buildingâs first floor features undergraduate instructional labs for organic and analytical chemistry surrounded by student collaboration space. Its upper two floors house open-concept research labsâsynthetic labs on the second floor and instrumentation-based labs on the thirdâas well as faculty and graduate student offices.
This new epicenter for cutting-edge research will give students hands-on experience with the latest technologies, says Dr. Stephen Bergmeier, professor and chair of the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.
âA lot of new techniques have come out since Clippinger was built and dedicated in 1965,â he says, also noting the more advanced research projects faculty and students have taken on over the years. âThe instruments tend to be more specific, so you need more of them.â
At the same time, enrollment in OHIOâs chemistry programs has exploded. Barlag, director of the Forensic Chemistry program, recalls having 35 students in her lab during her first year teaching in 2004. In 2020, she had almost 100 students.
âThe labs were too crowded in Clippinger,â she says. âWe desperately needed this space to accommodate and better serve our students.â
The building was designed with this growth in mindâand with the goal of investing in innovative research and bringing it to the forefront of campus. The wall of windows on the buildingâs north side drenches labs and offices in sunlight while putting science on display. And various configurations of open, communal spaces allow for interaction, collaboration and study.
âThe non-cramped nature of the building allows students that space to do their studying outside the lab, and thatâs something I just love to see because it was impossible in Clippinger,â Bergmeier says.
One new space in particular had Adam Hering, BS, BA â22, eagerly anticipating his senior-year research activities. Greeting visitors as they enter the buildingâs lobby, the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) labâs floor-to-ceiling windows bring chemical instrumentation, teaching and research out into the open.
âThe lab is busy all the time,â says Hering, who spends about 10 hours a week in the NMR lab researching how smaller molecules interact with larger ones. âYou get to see people working in there and see the instruments actually being used.â
Among the instrumentation housed in the NMR lab is a mass spectrometer funded by a 2020 National Science Foundation grant awarded to a group of researchers led by Bergmeier. Faculty will use the mass spectrometer to identify and characterize molecules, but that instrument and others throughout the building will also support research across the University.
âThat wouldâve been incredibleâ to see on a campus tour, Hering says of the NMR lab. âLetâs just say that I was born four years later, starting my freshman year right now. I would absolutely love what Iâm looking at.â
Faculty and select students got their first taste of OHIOâs newest research facility earlier this year. Graduate students spent winter break 2020 packing up instrumentation and transferring it from Clippinger to the new building, allowing a limited number of in-person labs during spring semester in line with COVID-19 restrictions.
For all the excitement, the transition is a little bittersweet for those who, like Barlag, spent untold hours in Clippinger.
âI enjoyed teaching in the room where I learned,â says Barlag. âItâs funny to say to students, âWhen I was your age, I dropped my beaker at this very lab bench and had to redo the whole experiment.ââ
But Clippinger, which now connects to the Chemistry Building via a covered walkway, isnât going anywhere. Renovation of the buildingâs east wing began this spring, kicking off the next phase of the Clippinger Renovation Project, which started with constructing the new Chemistry Building.
When a more modern Clippinger fully reopens in spring 2024, it will continue to house the physics, astronomy, geography and geological sciences departments, and certain chemistry classes could benefit from the updated space as well. Barlag envisions her old Clippinger basement stomping grounds as the perfect spot for her crime scene mockups, which she previously had to repeatedly set up and dismantle in her laboratory classroom.
In the meantime, students and faculty are beginning to make new memories and advancing science in the new building. Already, it feels like an integral part of the Athens Campus, Barlag says.
âIt looks like Clippinger,â she says. âIt looks like it belongs.â