Alice T. and William H. Goodwin, Jr. Dean, College of Engineering | B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Rice University
Engineering West Hall, Room 331A, Richmond, VA, US
Dean Boyan specializes in cell and tissue engineering
The award recognizes Rice alumni whose scholarship, mentorship and innovations have made significant contributions to their professions and communities.
2017-10-042016
2017-05-082006
2005
2003
2002
2001
2001
October 2001
Ph.D., Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology
1975
M.A., Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology
1974
B.A., Biology
1970
Next print
2020-02-04
Barbara D. Boyan, Ph.D., the Alice T. and William H. Goodwin Jr. Dean of the College of Engineering, said, “With the creation of the pharmaceutical engineering Ph.D. program, VCU will be a national leader in the education of the pharmaceutical workforce of today and innovators leading future developments. The program will address the growing need for a new generation of researchers trained in cross-disciplinary and interdisciplinary science who recognize the need for a team-based approach to solving challenges related to the design and manufacturing of pharmaceutical products.”
Richmond Times-Dispatch print
2019-12-16
“He’s a force of nature," said Barbara D. Boyan, dean of the VCU College of Engineering. And he has “changed the landscape of Richmond."
view moreRichmond Times-Dispatch print
2019-10-28
Today’s undergraduates are the most sophisticated users and consumers of technology colleges have ever seen. This is not surprising. Generation Z, those born after 1996, are digital natives. They have never known an analog world.
view moreRichmond Magazine online
2019-10-15
The 133,000-square-foot structure is set to open in time for the spring semester 2020, College of Engineering Dean Barbara Boyan said. Once it opens, the $93 million building will offer hands-on learning opportunities through a 9,000-square-foot Innovation Maker Facility with resources such as 3D printers and hand tools, research labs, computer science and biomedical engineering facilities and more.
VPM radio
2019-10-15
Dean Barbara Boyan says the school puts high-tech careers within reach of a diverse and talented group of students. “Our student body in the College of Engineering is in excess of 50% under-represented minorities and these are high quality students so they are able to get jobs very easily.”
view moreSociety of Women Engineers print
2019-09-30
Emily Allen, Ph.D., and Barbara Boyan, Ph.D., both became dean in 2013 — Dr. Allen at California State University, Los Angeles (Cal State LA) and Dr. Boyan, the Alice T. and William H. Goodwin Jr. Dean at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU). Both women took time from their busy schedules to discuss their career paths and perspectives on leadership for this year’s profile of women engineering leaders in academe.
Front doors to the future print
2019-09-03
The College of Engineering also is on track to grow to 2,000 students by 2020, a 39% increase over its enrollment in 2013, when Dean Barbara D. Boyan took over, outlining an aggressive agenda for growth. Boyan had three goals: “Increase the number of students, increase the research profile and increase faculty. We’ve been able to do that,” she says.
view moreRichmond Magazine print
2019-09-03
“It is all designed around experiential learning and getting students’ hands on projects,” says Barbara D. Boyan, dean of VCU’s engineering college.
view moreRichmond Times-Dispatch print
2018-12-12
Let’s not be overly concerned with where Amazon is in Virginia. Amazon HQ2’s influence — and its needs — will be too big to be confined to Northern Virginia. We in Central Virginia are ready to help all Virginia companies be the best they can be. Barbara D. Boyan.
view moreRichmond Times-Dispatch print
2018-10-14
“It’s a wonderful facility,” said Barbara Boyan, dean of the VCU College of Engineering and a member of the CCAM board of directors. “No university in America today could create it from scratch.” Camelio’s role represents “an unusual situation,” said VCU’s Boyan, who understands the state’s desire for a stepped-up presence at the center by research universities. “They want people — they want boots on the ground,” she said. However, Boyan said it’s not easy to recruit an “eminent scholar” in high-demand research who is willing to be based far from a university’s main campus. “Faculty love to collaborate, but they belong to an institution,” she said. “They want to be physically at the institution because that’s where the students are.” Her suggestion is a stepped-up presence of university professors and students at CCAM during summer, outside of the academic year. “If the professor is actively involved with her or her students, that’s the best solution,” Boyan said.
view moreRichmond Times-Dispatch print
2018-07-06
“VCU will have a very major role in that,” said Dr. Barbara D. Boyan, dean of the VCU College of Engineering and the Alice T. and William H. Goodwin Jr. endowed chair. “We’re moving to be one of the universities” in the CyberX network. “These people are all going to come together and the state will benefit,” predicted Boyan, a biochemist who specializes in cell and tissue engineering. Boyan also is chair of the Commonwealth Center for Advanced Logistics Systems, based in Colonial Heights. The Commonwealth Research Commercialization Fund, administered by CIT at its headquarters in Herndon, also issued a $100,000 grant to Boyan to further develop commercial uses for a “click hydrogel” she pioneered previously at Georgia Tech to close the cranial sutures in infant skulls at a measured rate that allows their brains to grow. For Boyan, GO Virginia is an essential partner to the Virginia Research Investment Committee in creating the economic conditions for taking technology research into commercial markets so it remains in Virginia, rather than benefiting companies out of state. “GO Virginia is really about infrastructure in the community,” the engineering dean said. “VRIC is infrastructure in the university. You can’t do one without the other.”
view moreRichmond Times-Dispatch print
2018-06-05
“The college was established as a public-private partnership with a mandate to educate engineers who will fuel economic development in the region,” said Barbara Boyan, the dean of the College of Engineering. “The ERB reflects our commitment to meeting this goal.”
Orthopedics This Week online
2018-05-24
Researchers have compared decellularized muscle matrix (DMM) to an autologous muscle graft and found that DMM enhanced muscle function recovery, muscle regeneration, and the formation of new neuromuscular junctions. The article, “Decellularized Muscle Supports New Muscle Fibers and Improves Function Following Volumetric Injury,” appears in the March 27, 2018 edition of Tissue Engineering Part A. Co-author Barbara Boyan, Ph.D., dean of the College of Engineering at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU), and Georgia Institute of Technology, told OTW, “There are a number of things that make this study special. First, it represents a collaboration between a tissue bank, the Musculoskeletal Transplant Foundation, and scientists at Virginia Commonwealth University. The grafts were designed to the specifications of a surgeon panel, which recommended that the graft be suturable and full length.”
view moreNews Medical online
2018-05-04
The article entitled "Decellularized Muscle Supports New Muscle Fibers and Improves Function Following Volumetric Injury" was coauthored by Barbara Boyan, PhD, Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU), Richmond and Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta and colleagues from VCU and Musculoskeletal Transplant. Foundation, Edison, NJ and University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.
view moreADVANCEDMANUFACTURING.ORG online
2018-04-27
“Since 2013, our faculty numbers have doubled, and our extramural research funding has quadrupled,” said Barbara D. Boyan, Ph.D., Alice T. and William H. Goodwin Chair and dean of the VCU College of Engineering. “Becoming the VCU College of Engineering recognizes the rapid growth during the last five years and positions us to continue our forward trajectory.”
view moreBusiness Wire online
2018-04-16
Barbara Boyan, Ph.D., Dean of Engineering at Virginia Commonwealth University, presented the results of an in vitro cell culture model used to assess whether the Duo implant’s polyethylene terephthalate (PET) mesh would have an impact on migration of osteoprogenitor cells from vertebral endplates onto bone graft in interbody fusion, and to assess the biological response of these cells to the bone graft.
view moreBusiness Wire online
2017-10-06
Virginia Bio, the statewide non-profit association representing the life science industry in the Commonwealth of Virginia, hosted a successful second annual Women Building Bio: The XX Factor conference. This year’s conference identified regional female leaders in the bioscience fields, reflected on innovative research that is changing the industry and provided opportunities for professional development and mentorship amongst all members of the community. Hosted on September 26 at the Inova Center for Personalized Health, Women Building Bio: The XX Factor converged nearly 250 attendees from across the industry to discuss a wide range of topics such as personalizing medicine to focus on individual patients, fostering lifelong mentorship, establishing public policies for health and encouraging the next generation of women to take on leadership roles. The event also placed an emphasis on networking to develop relationships formed around common interests and ambitions. “XX Factor is an inspirational event that recognizes the achievements of women in bioscience as well as highlights new and exciting research initiatives coming out of Virginia, DC, and Maryland,” said Barbara Boyan, Dean, School of Engineering, Virginia Commonwealth University. “We are excited to see members from the community come together, network and collaborate in order to continue pushing the region forward.”
view moreCommonwealth Times print
2017-09-18
“We have excelled at recruiting women into all aspects of engineering,” said Barbara Boyan, Dean of VCU’s School of Engineering. “The number of women in STEM fields has been on a consistent growth curve since I joined VCU in 2013.”
Richmond Times-Dispatch print
2017-09-17
“This is where things are going in the 21st century,” said Barbara Boyan, the dean of the School of Engineering. “Now we’re going to actually have a laboratory that lets us develop these things and work with them as they grow.”
Commonwealth Times print
2017-08-29
Barbara D. Boyan, Dean of the VCU School of Engineering, thanked the Gate’s Foundation for their gracious donation. “To be able to work on projects that are not only scientifically interesting, but also critically important for global health, is an incredible opportunity for our students and for the economic development of Richmond.”
view moreRichmond BizSense online
2017-08-25
The institute is led by Frank Gupton, professor and chairman of the school’s department of chemical and life science engineering. Gupton was among several speakers at Thursday’s announcement, including Gov. Terry McAuliffe, VCU President Michael Rao and Barbara Boyan, dean of the school.
Richmond Times Dispatch print
2017-08-25
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has awarded the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Engineering $25 million to create the Medicines for All Institute, a program that will seek ways to make life-saving medications less costly and more available worldwide. The grant - which is the largest the university has ever received from a private entity - was announced Thursday at an event held at the Biotechnology Research Park's Biotech Eight building on North Fifth Street, where the institute has set up a 30,000-square-foot space. Frank Gupton - chair of the Department of Chemical and Life Science Engineering at the School of Engineering - will lead the institute as it seeks ways to make medications to treat HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis and other diseases more accessible by reducing the manufacturing cost. "These are medicines for the most part that are either in the forms of generics or would-be generics," said Barbara D. Boyan, dean of the School of Engineering. "The costs of these medicines has not risen to a great extent, but to many people in the world they're still too expensive and just too difficult to have access to."
view moreVirginia Public Radio radio
2017-08-25
Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond has received the largest private grant in history: 25 million dollars from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The money will support the school’s “Medicines for All” research. Virginia’s Governor was on hand at the announcement. Mallory Noe-Payne reports.
view moreVirginiabio online
2017-08-25
The Virginia Commonwealth University School of Engineering has been awarded a $25 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to establish the Medicines for All Institute and to fund the institute’s work on a wide range of essential global health treatments. With this grant, the institute can help increase access to lifesaving medications for HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis and other diseases around the world. B. Frank Gupton, Ph.D., the Floyd D. Gottwald Professor and Chair of the Department of Chemical and Life Science Engineering in the VCU School of Engineering, will continue to lead and serve as principal investigator for Medicines for All. Over the past four years, the Gates Foundation has awarded nearly $15 million to Medicines for All. During this time and with this support, Medicines for All has developed an innovative model that reduces the cost of manufacturing AIDS treatments such as nevirapine by accelerating the creation of more efficient ways of synthesizing the active ingredients in the medications. The institute has also worked closely with the Clinton Health Access Initiative and other implementation partners to transfer the new processes to manufacturers so that more medications can reach communities in need. "The gift from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is an important recognition of the groundbreaking work being performed by Dr. Gupton and his team,” said Barbara D. Boyan, Ph.D., Alice T. and William H. Goodwin Chair and Dean of the VCU School of Engineering. “To be able to work on projects that are not only scientifically interesting, but also critically important for global health, is an incredible opportunity for our students and for the economic development of Richmond.”
view moreVirginia Business print
2017-06-30
VCU awarded 289 bachelor’s degrees in engineering during the 2016-17 academic year. Most of those degrees were in mechanical engineering, but computer engineering and computer science saw the biggest jump from the previous year (46 percent each). Dean Barbara Boyan attributes this type of growth to a climbing demand for talent in the technology field. “We can’t mint these students fast enough,” she says. VCU awarded 289 bachelor’s degrees in engineering during the 2016-17 academic year. Most of those degrees were in mechanical engineering, but computer engineering and computer science saw the biggest jump from the previous year (46 percent each). Dean Barbara Boyan attributes this type of growth to a climbing demand for talent in the technology field. “We can’t mint these students fast enough,” she says.
view moreGeorgia Tech News online
2017-05-03
“I have been lucky to have been able to assemble an outstanding leadership team,” says Barbara Boyan, who became dean of engineering at Virginia Commonwealth University in 2013. “Watching [former CoE Dean] Don Giddens and Gary May as role models, I learned to trust my team.” Boyan (left) spent over a decade at CoE, and she ended her tenure there as associate dean for research and innovation. While at Georgia Tech, she helped spearhead the Institute’s relationship with Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, and she directed the Translational Research Institute for Bioengineering and Science (which led to the creation of the master’s program in biomedical innovation and development). “The leadership team empowers faculty and staff at all levels to be the best that they can be,” she says.
view moreMilwaukee Wisconsin Journal Sentinel print
2016-12-25
The day after his first call to Barbara Boyan, Kevin Gemas was on a plane to meet her in Atlanta. Gemas’ company, Mequon-based Titan Spine, was selling titanium medical devices used in back surgery to shore up injured or deteriorating vertebrae. The devices seemed to work better than the plastic materials that were commonly used for spinal fusions at the time, but Gemas and his Titan Spine co-founder, Neenah spine surgeon Peter Ullrich Jr., didn’t know why. Boyan did. A cell biologist at Emory University, she had spent decades studying how bones heal. “There is more here than meets the eye, and more than you guys probably realize,” she said at the time ....
view moreVirginia Business
2016-06-29
“We can’t train them fast enough,” says Barbara D. Boyan, dean of the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Engineering, whose undergraduate enrollment has grown 24 percent in the past four years. “There are way more jobs than there are students that we are graduating. … All of the engineering schools are ramping up for this. It’s been an amazing explosion; we all feel the excitement of it but we also feel the pressure of it.”...
view moreGenetic Engineering and Biotechnology News online
2015-05-28
That was when Strauss enlisted help from Barbara D. Boyan, Ph.D., dean of the VCU School of Engineering. Boyan specializes in musculoskeletal biology. "Researchers from Strauss' lab could see that a problem had occurred, but there are many techniques that we use in biomedical engineering that let us narrow in on what the defect is," Boyan said. Researchers at her lab analyzed the shapes of the bones and the way they developed in the embryos. They also did cell culture studies in which they isolated cells from the defective animals to see if the defect in limb length was due to a fundamental alteration in their ability to form bone...
view moreBecker's Spine Review print
2015-02-17
Dr. Slosar reported on a study conducted by Barbara Boyan, PhD, Dean of the School of Engineering at Virginia Commonwealth University, comparing Titan Spine's titanium implants with PEEK implants and found the titanium implants can stimulate stem cells to behave differently by promoting bone formation instead of creating inflammation and fibrosis. "Through this research, we are able to better understand how implant surface properties influence specific inflammatory micro-environment factors," said Dr. Boyan. "We found that the titanium alloy surface with a complex micron scale and submicron scale roughness promotes a cellular response that favors bone formation. Conversely, PEEK created an inflammation response that will more likely lead to fibrous tissue formation."
view moreMedical Express
2013-09-24
"This means that by modifying titanium alloy surfaces to stimulate bone cells to produce these important factors, surgeons may be able to improve the performance of spine cages and, as a result, quality of care for their patients," said Barbara D. Boyan, Ph.D., dean of the VCU School of Engineering, who led the study...
view moreThe New York Times
2013-05-06
“Children have growth spurts. Their immune systems and hormones are changing,” said Barbara D. Boyan, the dean of the engineering school at Virginia Commonwealth University. “You need to be able to adapt to different ages, different stages of development.”...
view moreBiomaterials
2016
Microscale surface roughness has been shown to enhance osseointegration of titanium implants through increased osteoblast differentiation while osteoblast proliferation remains greater on smooth titanium. Taking advantage of these phenomena, we ...
Acta Biomaterialia
2014
The use of spinal implants for spine fusion has been steadily increasing to avoid the risks of complications and donor site morbidity involved when using autologous bone. A variety of fusion cages are clinically available, with different shapes and chemical ...
Acta Biomaterialia
2014
Dental and orthopedic implants have been under continuous advancement to improve their interactions with bone and ensure a successful outcome for patients. Surface characteristics such as surface topography and surface chemistry can serve as design ...
Acta Biomaterialia
2013
Surface micro-and nanostructural modifications of dental and orthopedic implants have shown promising in vitro, in vivo and clinical results. Surface wettability has also been suggested to play an important role in osteoblast differentiation and osseointegration. ...
Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B: Applied Biomaterials
2012
Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) is a synthetic polymer derived from polyvinyl acetate through partial or full hydroxylation. PVA is commonly used in medical devices due to its low protein adsorption characteristics, biocompatibility, high water solubility, and chemical ...
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