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For University of Virginia Department of Chemical Engineering in 2015-2026, the graph shows 30 visible PIs and 22 internal PI collaborations. The main research signal is Materials Science as the leading field (21% of slots across 15 PIs; 15 labels), Materials Chemistry as the leading subfield (12% of slots across 10 PIs; 10 labels), and Catalytic Processes in Materials Science as the leading topic (6% of slots across 5 PIs; 5 labels). The network looks reasonably well-rounded, with visible collaboration groups but not so much concentration that one field explains the whole department. The most prominent PIs by weighted works are Gary M. Koenig (63.8 weighted works; Advancements in Battery Materials, Advanced Battery Technologies Research). The clearest collaboration lines are Gary M. Koenig and Geoffrey M. Geise (10 shared works, weight 6). The strongest breakdown groups are group 1 with 9 PIs, 11 internal connections, weight 14.2, around Materials Chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry, Catalysis, led by Robert J. Davis, Gaurav Giri, William S. Epling.