Nastassja A. Lewinski, Ph.D.

Associate Professor, Department of Chemical and Life Science Engineering

  • Engineering West Hall, Room 438, Richmond VA UNITED STATES
nalewinski@vcu.edu

Dr. Lewinski's research topics include nanomaterial toxicity, nanomedicine, and nanoinformatics.

Contact

Media

Biography

Nastassja Lewinski is currently an Associate Professor of Chemical and Life Science Engineering at Virginia Commonwealth University. She holds a Ph.D. in Bioengineering and a B.S. in Chemical Engineering from Rice University. Dr. Lewinski has focused her career on integrating biological and environmental compatibility into the design process of engineered nanomaterials. Her research areas include nanotoxicology, nanoinformatics, and sustainable nanotechnology. Her projects over the past three years were supported through industry and VCU sponsorship. She has received numerous prestigious awards and fellowships including the AIChE 35 Under 35 Award in 2017, Leenaards Nested Research Projects Award in 2014, Whitaker International Scholar Award in 2011, NSF Graduate Research Fellowship in 2008, Barry Goldwater Scholarship in 2005, and she is a member of both Tau Beta Pi and Phi Lambda Upsilon. Dr. Lewinski has authored and co-authored 30 peer-reviewed journal articles, 5 book chapters, and 1 provisional patent. She currently advises 1 Postdoctoral fellow, 2 Ph.D. student and 1 M.S. student.

Industry Expertise

Nanotechnology
Education/Learning
Research

Areas of Expertise

Nanomaterial toxicity
Nanoinformatics
Nanomedicine
Advanced in vitro exposure systems
Comparative in vitro – in vivo analyses

Accomplishments

AIChE 35 Under 35 Awardee

2017

Leenaards Nested Research Projects Prix Awardee

2014

Whitaker International Scholar

2011

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Education

Institute for Work and Health, Lausanne, Switzerland

Postdoctoral

2014

Rice University

Ph.D.

Bioengineering

2011

Rice University

B.S.

Chemical Engineering

2006

Affiliations

  • Research Member, Center for Pharmaceutical Engineering and Sciences
  • Fellow, Center for Risk Management of Engineering Systems, University of Virginia
  • Section Editor, Drug and Chemical Toxicology

Media Appearances

AIChE 35 Under 35: Safety

American Institute of Chemical Engineering (AIChE)  online

2017-09-14

Nastassja is an assistant professor of chemical and life science engineering at Virginia Commonwealth University. She serves as faculty advisor to the student chapter and is the VCU faculty representative in the Tidewater Virginia Local Section. Nastassja is also active in the Sustainable Engineering Forum. Among her awards are the Leenaards Nested Research Projects Prix (2014), a NNEMS Fellowship with the U.S. EPA (2008), and an NSF Graduate Fellowship (2008).

AIChE YPC: What inspired you to pursue chemical engineering?

Nastassja Lewinski: I chose to pursue chemical engineering because it encompasses my lifelong interests in chemistry and math.

AIChE YPC: Chemical engineering is a diverse field. How did you get involved in your specialty?

NL: During my studies, several people reinforced my interest in nanotechnology and safety by design. My Ph.D. advisor, Rebekah Drezek, cultivated my interest in nanomedicine. The WISE program sponsored by AIChE and my advisor, Dave Gushee, encouraged my engagement in science policy. Vicki Colvin and Kristen Kulinowski drew my attention to aquatic toxicology and industrial hygiene.

AIChE YPC: What professional achievement are you most proud of?

NL: My postdoctoral fellowship in Lausanne, Switzerland, provided the opportunity not only to collaborate with fellow researchers in the institute who spoke English, but also work with non-English speaking staff. I learned how people outside the United States conduct research and how to work in a non-English speaking environment professionally.

AIChE YPC: What is the most challenging part of your job?

NL: The most challenging part of being a university professor is balancing research and teaching. Besides advancing my own research program, motivating and supporting both the students in my lab and also the students in my courses consumes a good portion of my time.

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Patents

Portable in vitro exposure cassette (PIVEC)

62/490,751

U.S. Provisional Patent Application.
Inventors: N. Lewinski and L. Secondo

Courses

CLSE 202: Chemical Engineering Fundamentals II: Energy Balances and Engineering Thermodynamics

Spring 2018, 2019, 2020

CLSE 305: Thermodynamics of Phase Equilibria and Chemical Reactions

Fall 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017
This course provides the foundation needed to solve sophisticated problems encountered in thermodynamics and unit operations. Students are introduced to the mathematical relationships and thermodynamic models needed to describe pure component and mixture phase behavior. These models include equations of state, liquid solution activity coefficient models, and fugacity estimation techniques. Numerous phase equilibrium problems are addressed including liquid-vapor, liquid-liquid, liquid-liquid-vapor, and solid-vapor equilibria. The prediction of chemical equilibrium is also covered in this course.

ENGR 497: Vertically Integrated Project - Nanoinformatics

Fall 2017 - present
The VIP Nanoinformatics team will participate in cutting-edge research in machine learning and nanomedicine design. This includes the development of multiple natural language processing tools that use complex algorithms and artificial intelligence techniques to retrieve nanomedicine texts from the primary literature, classify the texts into topics, extract relevant entities on nanomedicine, and extract relationships between entities, to name a few. Students also have the opportunity to gain hands on laboratory experience in nanoparticle synthesis, physico-chemical characterization, exposure assessment, and biocompatibility testing.

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Selected Articles

Real-time monitoring of cellular oxidative stress during aerosol sampling: a proof of concept study

Drug and Chemical Toxicology

2020

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Comparative analysis of ventilation efficiency on ultrafine particle removal in university MakerSpaces

Atmospheric Environment

2020

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On‐site three‐dimensional printer aerosol hazard assessment: Pilot study of a portable in vitro exposure cassette

Process Safety Progress

2019

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