Keynote Speakers

Dan Cherowbrier Formula E

Dan Cherowbrier is the chief technology officer (CTO) of Formula E, responsible for the championship's comprehensive technical strategy. He oversees broadcast technology, racing and safety services, cybersecurity, and the innovation road map.

Prior to joining Formula E, Cherowbrier spent over a decade as an innovative technical leader and management consultant, specializing in the media and sports industries. He continues to serve as a fractional CTO for the UIM E1 Series. Earlier in his career, Cherowbrier managed high-availability systems in media and telecommunications, taking on senior roles at Arqiva and Babcock International Group. He also holds patents for audience data-collection technologies. Cherowbrier holds a BSc with honors in broadcast media technology from Ravensbourne College of Design & Communication.

Taylor Garrick General Motors

Taylor Garrick started his career at General Motors (GM) in 2017 with the Global Propulsion Systems group after receiving his doctorate in chemical engineering from the College of Engineering and Computing at the University of South Carolina. He spent three years in the advanced engineering group working on the Chevrolet Volt and Chevrolet Bolt before joining the Virtual Design, Development, and Validation group to focus on developing mathematical models for battery and battery system design.

Currently, he is the virtual propulsion technical specialist for battery cell electrochemistry at GM, where he serves as a technical leader for a team focused on applying electrochemical models to the development of energy storage devices and systems.

Garrick is a board member of the Industrial Electrochemistry and Electrochemical Engineering division of the Electrochemical Society. He also serves as an associate editor for the Journal of the Electrochemical Society, focused on mathematical models, battery systems, and the application of artificial intelligence and machine learning to industrial electrochemistry.

As a result of his engineering efforts, Garrick is a six-time recipient of the Boss Kettering Award, the highest technical award given by GM. His technical contributions span 37 pending and granted US patents, as well as more than 60 technical journal articles.

Hannah Alpert, PhD NASA Ames Research Center

Hannah Alpert received her PhD in aeronautics and astronautics from Stanford University. She is currently working as an aerospace systems engineer at NASA Ames Research Center in the Entry Systems and Vehicle Development Branch. Her work includes heat shield design, post-flight analysis, instrumentation, and thermal modeling.

Dr. Jongyoon Han Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Dr. Jongyoon Han is a professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Biological Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He received a BS (1992) and an MS (1994) in physics from Seoul National University, South Korea, and a PhD in applied physics from Cornell University in 2001. He received the National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Award (2003) and the Analytical Chemistry Young Innovator Award (ACS, 2009).

Dr. Han’s current research focuses on engineering innovative microfluidic solutions for various industrial applications, including bioprocessing and biomanufacturing, desalination and water purification, and biosensing. He is currently the lead principal investigator for MIT’s participation in the National Institute for Innovation in Manufacturing Biopharmaceuticals (NIIMBL). He is also a co-lead principal investigator for the CAMP Interdisciplinary Research Group (IRG) at the SMART Center in Singapore, where novel critical quality attributes (CQAs) for cell therapies are being developed.