Report summary
For University of Washington Department of Chemical Engineering in 2015-2026, the graph shows 58 visible PIs and 90 internal PI collaborations. The main research signal is Engineering as the leading field (24% of slots across 28 PIs; 28 labels), Molecular Biology as the leading subfield (14% of slots across 19 PIs; 19 labels), and Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques as the leading topic (3% of slots across 5 PIs; 5 labels). That is a healthy pattern, with enough links to reveal several interpretable groups rather than one undifferentiated component. The most prominent PIs by weighted works are Charles T. Campbell (53.4 weighted works; Catalytic Processes in Materials Science, Electrocatalysts for Energy Conversion); Jim Pfaendtner (49.7 weighted works; Ionic liquids properties and applications, Protein Structure and Dynamics). The clearest collaboration lines are Peter J. Pauzauskie and E. James Davis (16 shared works, weight 8.3). The strongest breakdown groups are group 1 with 9 PIs, 9 internal connections, weight 41.6, around Molecular Biology, Biomaterials, Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics, led by Jim Pfaendtner, James J. De Yoreo, Chun‐Long Chen.
