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As natural resources dwindle and the world's population expands, innovative materials that cut energy use, minimize environmental impact from energy generation, and lower costs become ever more vital. These advancements help reconcile rising demands for consumer products and fuels with planetary sustainability. Within the Chemistry Department, our researchers work to engineer and comprehend energy-consuming and releasing processes, tap chemical potential to initiate novel reactions, create alternative fuels, and harness solar power. This interdisciplinary work connects chemistry with materials science, physics, and engineering processes. Faculty investigations concentrate on structure-function relationships, energy-capturing organic/inorganic materials, catalytic transition metals and lanthanides, reaction pathways, and light-driven chemistry to address pressing global energy and catalysis challenges. Earning a chemistry PhD opens doors to professional molecular problem-solving. As practicing chemists or biochemists, graduates tackle tangible challenges and contribute to significant societal matters that often transcend traditional academic boundaries. Lehigh's Chemistry program cultivates independent scientific thinkers prepared for today's interdisciplinary research landscape. Our graduate students pursue investigations spanning fundamental chemical principles to intricate, cross-disciplinary mission-driven projects. Lehigh University's Chemistry Department delivers an exceptional graduate education, blending comprehensive chemical training with pioneering multidisciplinary research. Faculty expertise covers all core chemistry domains: Analytical, Inorganic, Biochemical, Organic, Computational, and Physical Chemistry. The program equips students with robust chemical foundations while enabling engagement with forefront interdisciplinary research challenges. Investigative opportunities exist across materials chemistry, biological chemistry, surface science, nanotechnology, alongside conventional analytical, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry specialties.