Jonhatan Lorenzo
About Jonhatan Lorenzo
Jonhatan Lorenzo is a Process Engineer at ExxonMobil, with a background in Chemical Engineering and extensive experience in mentoring and teaching.
Title
Jonathan Lorenzo currently holds the position of Process Engineer at ExxonMobil.
Company
Jonathan Lorenzo currently works at ExxonMobil, a multinational oil and gas corporation, based in Rotterdam, South Holland, Netherlands. Since 2020, he has been involved in the short and long-term improvement of gas processing units, including Amine (Flexsorb and MEA), Sour Water Strippers, Sulphur Recovery Units, and Tail Gas Treating.
Education and Expertise
Jonathan Lorenzo completed a Master's degree in Chemical Engineering at Delft University of Technology from 2017 to 2019. Prior to this, he earned a Bachelor's degree in Chemical Engineering from the University of Groningen, where he completed over 1000 hours of experimental work focusing on the formation of carbonates with supercritical carbon dioxide and epoxides. Lorenzo also holds an Associate of Science (AS) in Mathematics from San Jacinto College and a High School Diploma from Tecnológico de Monterrey, where he graduated with a grade of 8.3/10.
Professional Experience
Before joining ExxonMobil, Jonathan Lorenzo held several roles. He worked as a tutor and orientation leader at San Jacinto College from 2012 to 2014 and served as a teaching assistant and mentor at the University of Groningen from 2016 to 2017. Additionally, he worked as an engineering intern at Bright Circular in 2018, a student mentor at TU Delft from 2018 to 2019, and hosted at X Center, TU Delft. He has also gained international experience working at KU Leuven on the Julia Programming Language for Scientific Computing and at the University POLITEHNICA of Bucharest on Regenerative Energy Systems.
Research and Projects
Jonathan Lorenzo’s academic research includes a Master's thesis involving Computational Fluid Dynamics, specifically researching fluid disturbances in the Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm. During his bachelor's degree, Lorenzo completed over 1000 hours of experimental work, focusing on the formation of carbonates with supercritical carbon dioxide and epoxides. These research projects reflect his expertise in both practical and computational aspects of chemical engineering.