About

Honoring Dr. Thomas J. O’Keefe

The O’Keefe Institute performs basic and applied research to develop technology, methodologies and tools that facilitate sustainable supply of strategic minerals for the United States. The Institute also does science-based policy work that informs government policy on strategic minerals. The Institute leverages state-of-the-art research facilities distributed across the Missouri S&T campus and faculty researchers from several academic departments.

The institute is named in honor of the late Dr. Thomas J. O’Keefe, Curators’ Distinguished Professor of materials science and engineering at Missouri S&T. An internationally known authority on electrodeposition of metals, O’Keefe earned a bachelor’s degree from S&T in 1958. After graduation, he joined Dow Chemical Co. as a process control metallurgist before returning to S&T as an instructor in 1964. He went on to earn a Ph.D. in metallurgical engineering in 1965 and served on the metallurgical engineering faculty and as a senior research investigator in the Graduate Center for Materials Research for over 40 years.

Dr. O’Keefe’s Primary Area of Focus

O’Keefe’s primary areas of research focused on chemical and extractive metallurgy and deposition of coatings. In the 1990s, he and chemistry Curators’ Distinguished Professor Dr. James O. Stoffer began pioneering research to replace toxic chromates used as a corrosion inhibitor on military aircraft. Their work resulted in the first environmentally friendly alternative to toxic, chrome-based anti-corrosions coatings. Their discoveries are patented and used extensively in the aerospace industry as a certified standard solution for aircraft coatings. The research also led to an R&D 100 Award from R&D Magazine.

Dr. O’Keefe’s Accomplishments

O’Keefe graduated over 60 Ph.D. students, published 170 articles, had 11 issued U.S. and foreign patents, and received numerous awards throughout his career. In 2008, the Dr. Thomas J. O’Keefe Lecture Series at Missouri S&T was created in his honor to bring accomplished metallurgists from industry to campus to share their expertise with students.