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Short Bio
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Biographical Information
In the ten years (or so) since Frank retired from active teaching in the Department of Chemical Engineering and received Emeritus status, he has continued his professional activities and added a few avocations.
He has continued to consult and teach short courses in areas defined by Electrochemical Engineering and Science and Battery / Fuel Cell Technology. Prior to leaving the University, he had formed Minotaur Technologies which provided the basis for his extramural teaching and consulting activities. Minotaur has provided in-house courses for some of the best-known battery manufacturers in the country.
In addition, he has been engaged by attorneys in the areas of corrosion and energy technology as an expert witness in civil law suits as he describes his work: “I’m always on the side of the angels and folks who have been seriously hurt.”
The busy Departmental and University schedules had more-or-less eliminated serious reading, studying, and traveling of a non-professional nature for him. Retirement was the remedy for that situation. Recently, he has traveled extensively in the American southwest becoming a student of culture, scenery, and geology along the way. He has been invited to give talks to local school children on “The Four Corners Anasazi” and is currently working on VCDs and Windows Media Player presentations about, among other things, Willa Cather’s Death Comes for the Archbishop and Chaco Culture National Historical Park.
Because of problems with the University’s email (for extramural customers) system, Frank can be reached through Minotaur Technologies at minotaurfd@aol.com.
His principal research interest is in the field of electrochemical engineering with emphasis on oxidation-reduction reactions in ambient temperature molten salts. In 1983-1984 he was a University Resident Research Professor at the Air Force Academy, where he performed research on low temperature molten salts.
Last Updated: March 2007

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