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Report summary

For University of Virginia Department of Chemical Engineering in 2021-2023, the graph shows 16 visible PIs and 8 internal PI collaborations. The main research signal is Engineering as the leading field (26% of slots across 10 PIs; 10 labels), Biomedical Engineering as the leading subfield (14% of slots across 6 PIs; 6 labels), and Catalysis and Oxidation Reactions as the leading topic (6% of slots across 3 PIs; 3 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 (25.7 weighted works; Advancements in Battery Materials, Advanced Battery Materials and Technologies). The clearest collaboration lines are Gary M. Koenig and Geoffrey M. Geise (3 shared works, weight 2.1); Rachel A. Letteri and Kyle J. Lampe (3 shared works, weight 1.6). The strongest breakdown groups are group 1 with 5 PIs, 5 internal connections, weight 2.9, around Materials Chemistry, Catalysis, Mechanical Engineering, led by Gaurav Giri, Robert J. Davis, William S. Epling.