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Computer Science & Engineering alumnus named Chair at Columbia University

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Andrew Laine, DSc 1989, was named Chair of the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Columbia University.

 
After receiving his doctorate degree from Washington University in St. Louis, Dr. Laine went on to become a faculty member at the University of Florida from 1990-1997. In August of 1997, Dr. Laine took a faculty position at Columbia University when the Department of Biomedical Engineering was being formed.
Abstract:
Andrew Laine was named the Department of Biomedical Engineering Chair.
ImageUrl: http://cse.wustl.edu/ContentImages/News%20Images/AndrewLaine_lg.jpg
DateAdded: 9/7/2012

Computer Science & Engineering alumnus awarded tenure

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Aniruddha Gokhale, DSc 1998, was awarded tenure and promoted to Associate Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Vanderbilt University in an announcement made in May 2010.

Professor Gokhale joined the Institute for Software Integrated Systems at Vanderbilt University in 2002 first as a Research Scientist, and later transitioned into a tenure track faculty position starting Fall 2003. Among his many recognitions, he received an NSF CAREER Award in 2009.
 
Professor Gokhale's research blends software engineering techniques with systems research focusing specifically on distributed real-time and embedded systems. In particular he is interested in the real-time and fault-tolerance challenges in these large-scale systems. His recent work is focusing on the interdisciplinary research he is leading on Intelligent Transportation Systems and addressing the multiple different challenges in this space by formulating the solutions in the context of Cyber Physical Systems.
Abstract:
Anirüddhā Gokhālé, DSc, was promoted to Associate Professor at Vanderbilt University.
ImageUrl: http://cse.wustl.edu/ContentImages/News%20Images/Gokhale_lg.jpg
DateAdded: 5/21/2010

Missouri Society of Professional Engineers Scholarships available

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The Missouri Society of Professional Engineers, St. Louis Chapter Auxiliary will award one $2,000 Herta Osterloh Memorial Scholarship and two $1,500 scholarships to engineering students for the 2011-2012 school year.

Junior and senior engineering students at Washington University and students in the UMSL/WUSTL joint undergraduate engineering program are eligible to apply. In addition, students should:

Demonstrate scholastic achievement

Reside (both student & parents) in the Metropolitan St. Louis area, including St. Louis, Jefferson, Franklin, St. Charles, Lincoln and Warren counties

Have financial need

Be a U.S. citizen (green card will not qualify)

To apply for a scholarship, students should submit the following documents via e-mail or the U.S. Postal Service:

Completed application

Transcript (student copy is acceptable)

At least one recommendation regarding your merit by a dean, faculty member or advisor from the School of Engineering & Applied Science

All documents should be submitted to Bernadette Lauth, Scholarship Chairman, at blauth@kunafoodservice.com or to 9722 Southgate Lane, St. Louis, MO 63128-1128.

Applications must be received by January 31, 2011.

Abstract:
Junior and senior engineering students shouls send applications materials to: blauth@kunafoodservice.com.
DateAdded: 1/4/2011

New iPhone course receives positive review from local writer

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Todd Sproull's course "Software Engineering Workshop" was reviewed by networking and Internet technology blogger David Strom. The course, offered through the Department of Computer Science & Engineering in fall 2009, taught students how to write iPhone applications.

Strom, who is not affiliated with Washington University in St. Louis, visited Sproull’s course for final presentations.

"I was impressed first of all with the apps, which ranged from tracking what is in your fridge to being used by a personal trainer to track their clients’ workouts to locating friends on a campus map during free times... Each team had to research and find an app to build that wasn’t yet sold on the App Store, too....most of the students had high standards for the look and feel of their apps. Some of the kids took the time to find the right icons to display on screen, and they all took pains to make use of the various menus and screen controls that make the iPhone apps easy to use with one or two fingers. That was impressive, and showed me that the iPhone really has a future and why 100,000 plus apps have been already created."

To read David Strom's full blog entry, click here.

Todd Sproull's work was also featured in The Riverfront Times.

Abstract:
IT journalist David Strom blogged about his experience of attending the final presentations of Todd Sproull's "Software Engineering Workshop" students.
ImageUrl: http://cse.wustl.edu/ContentImages/News%20Images/ToddSproull_lg.JPG
DateAdded: 12/11/2009

Computer Science & Engineering professor receives grant from National Science Foundation

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Raj Jain, PhD, professor of computer science and engineering, has received a two-year, $200,000 collaborative grant from the National Science Foundation for research titled "Eager: An Application Delivery Platform for Mobile Apps on Global Clouds."

The collaborative grant between Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) and Washington University in St. Louis will fund research to develop a next generation Internet architecture for supporting mobile apps using cloud computing centers distributed throughout the globe.
 
Abstract
In recent years, there has been an explosive growth in mobile applications, most of which need to serve global audiences. Cloud computing provides unique opportunities for the application service providers to manage and optimize application delivery over geographically distributed computing resources. The PIs of this project are developing an open application delivery network platform which will allow Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to offer load balancing, fault tolerance, and numerous other application delivery services to the application service providers.
 
The PIs also plan to augment the flow abstraction layer of Software Defined Networks to add adequate support for application-level flows using several other recent innovations such as cross-layer communication, ID/Locator split, MPLS-like label switching. The claims will be validated through a proof-of-concept implementation of a use-case scenario designed over a prototype switch implementation.
 
A goal of the proposed design is to be evolutionary in the sense that it can coexist and is backward compatible with the current Internet and can be deployed incrementally now with a small number of new devices. The in-going research is designed to transform application delivery over the Internet. It would make significant contributions towards developing a set of generic architectural primitives that may be used for developing application specific networks on shared network infrastructure.
Abstract:
Raj Jain, in collaboration with Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis, has received a $200,000 grant to develop a next generation Internet architecture.
ImageUrl: http://cse.wustl.edu/ContentImages/News%20Images/Jain_newsart_72.jpg
DateAdded: 11/6/2012

Green solutions

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By Sarosh Bana, Business India

Sustainable energy was the dominant theme of the fourth annual symposium of the McDonnell Academy Global Energy and Environment Partnership (MAGEEP) held in Mumbai recently.

This global partnership began in 2007 with the founding of the McDonnell International Scholars Academy at the Washington University in St. Louis (WUSTL), USA. A consortium of 28 premier universities across 16 countries in the Asia-Pacific, the Middle East, Europe and Latin America, it includes Mumbai’s Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay (IIT-B) and Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Dehli’s Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) and Indian Institute of Science-Bangalore.

Drawing support from governments, the private sector, non-government organisations (NGOs) and the United Nations, this global endeavor collaborates on research that helps meet worldwide needs for energy and a clean environment. The effort has incubated numerous programmes across the developing world to assess and address the energy needs of over 3 billion rural inhabitants.

A WUSTL study on how plan proteins harvest light and funnel it to reaction centres is guiding efforts to improve next-generation solar technologies. Another aims to produce cheap and scalable solar cells through the use of titanium dioxide (TiO2) that is easier and cheaper to produce than silicon. TiO2 absorbs only ultraviolet light, but combined with dyes, quantum dots or nanowires, it can be used to make solar cells that absorb light at a wide range of wavelengths.

Access to Energy
“Every day, billions of people burn biomass to stay warm and prepare food, and for these people, energy access is the dividing line between the haves and the have-nots,” says WUSTL chancellor Mark Wrighton, the driving force behind MAGEEP and the Scholars Academy. “Our symposium brings university leaders, researchers, students and corporate partners together to discuss how to improve energy access in developing nations, while addressing environmental and societal effects."

MAGEEP director Pratim Biswas notes that this 28-university research network has created a collaborative global reach that is making a positive difference in meeting the challenges of energy and the environment. “Our ACCESS (Abundant Clean Cost-Effective Energy Systems for Sustainability) initiative joins other MAGEEP research projects that range from developing clean coal technology to energy efficiency in campus buildings, and from bio-energy and solar energy to entrepreneurship and venture capital,” says Biswas, who also chairs the energy, environmental & chemical engineering department in WUSTL’s School of Engineering & Applied Science.

WUSTL and IIT-Bombay are collaborating with corporate partners such as the St. Louis-based solar cell maker MEMC Electronic Materials, Inc on inventing solar technologies under the US-India consortium on solar energy. The consortium enlisted IIT-B and WUSTL to set up the Solar Energy Research Institute in India and the US (SERIIS) to co-ordinate its efforts. MEMC will be a major contributor to the programme, which will receive $50 million over the next five years for research and deployment of solar systems in India.

“Our initiative in developing countries, primarily focuses on access to modern energy services, and in developed countries, on energy efficiency and renewables,” says Sujeesh Krishnan, special advisor to the UN Secretary General’s high-level group on ‘Sustainable Energy for All’. According to him, there are over 100 organisations within the network that do work in India, with close to 40 of them based in the country.

“There are many challenges in inducting new technologies to solve energy poverty in developing countries,” says Dr Gautam Tadama, associate professor of social work and director of International Programmes at the Brown School at Washington University. “Not only is there often a strong disconnect between new technologies and the communities in which they are used, a fresh approach is also necessary to address the underlying reasons that cause energy dependence.” During the symposium, Yadama debuted his new book, Portraits of The Energy Impoverished: Fires, Fuel, and the Fate of 3 Billion, which illustrates the challenges faced by those who rely on biomass and other solid fuels to meet energy needs.

Abstract:
The fourth annual symposium of the McDonnell Academy Global Energy and Environment Partnership (MAGEEP) was featured in Business India.
ImageUrl: http://admin.seas.wustl.edu/ContentImages/newsphotos/News%20photos%20post%202.15.12/India_Pratim_news_article_72.jpg
DateAdded: 3/5/2013

Chinese Academy of Sciences awards Einstein Chair Professorship Award to Professor T.J. Tarn

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Electrical & Systems Engineering Professor T.J. Tarn is the recipient of the Chinese Academy of Sciences Einstein Chair Professorship Award.

The Einstein Professorship Program is a key initiative of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). Einstein Professorships are awarded each year to 20 distinguished international scientists actively working at the frontiers of science and technology, for conducting lecture-tours to China.
 
The goals of the program are to: strengthen science and technology links, cooperation and exchange between CAS scientists and respective Einstein Professors and their laboratories, as well as enhance the training of future generations of scientists in China.
 
The Chinese Academy of Sciences established the Einstein Professorship in 2005. The Academy elects 10 to 12 leading foreign scientists for this award each year. Many current and past recipients are Nobel Laureates. In 2009, six recipients were Nobel laureate in fields ranging from economics to physics, and one Turing Award winner. This year, they elected 11 recipients. Professor Tarn is the first engineer to receive this award. He is expected to give a public speech at the Great People's Hall in Beijing when the certificate is presented. The award includes RMB 150,000.00 (U.S. $23,000).
Abstract:
The Academy elects 10 to 12 leading foreign scientists for this award each year. Many current and past recipients are Nobel Laureates.
ImageUrl: http://admin.seas.wustl.edu/ContentImages/newsphotos/Tarn_newsart_72.jpg
DateAdded: 3/15/2010

Global energy symposium

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The "McDonnell International Scholars Academy Symposium: Global Energy Future,” was held Oct. 1-5 at Washington University in St. Louis.

The symposium was attended by the presidents or presidential representatives of 23 universities who are partners in the McDonnell International Scholars Academy and by many of their faculty and graduate students.

Participants reviewed the progress in research collaborations and identified new research opportunities that might reduce carbon dioxide emission, improve efficiency of energy utilization or lead to more rapid deployment of renewable energy sources.

Abstract:
The symposium was attended by the presidents or presidential representatives of 23 universities who are partners in the McDonnell International Scholars Academy and by many of their faculty and graduate students.
ImageUrl: http://admin.seas.wustl.edu/ContentImages/newsphotos/mageep_ralph_news_article_72.jpg
DateAdded: 10/18/2010

Professor Phil Bayly receives "Big Fish" Mentor Award

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The Association of Graduate Engineering Students (AGES) chose Professor Phil Bayly as this year's recipient of the "Big Fish" Mentor Award.

Students were asked to identify members of the Engineering faculty who are great mentors, teachers, and guides to graduate students. These nominations were then reviewed by the AGES executive board who determined the winner based on their contributions to the engineering graduate student community.

Professor Bayly will be presented with the award on Friday, May 11 during a recognition ceremony. At the ceremony, AGES will describe the meaning behind "Big Fish" and share the nominating students' heartfelt words.

Abstract:
The Association of Graduate Engineering Students (AGES) presents this coveted award to a deserving faculty member chosen from a pool of nominees.
ImageUrl: http://admin.seas.wustl.edu/contentimages/newsphotos/Bayly_newsart_72.jpg
DateAdded: 4/30/2012

New Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science course for fall 2011

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Assistant Professor Parag Banerjee, who joined the Department of Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science in fall 2011, will teach a new course: "Electronic Materials Processing."

Course description: The microelectronics industry champions the cause of precision manufacturing by building chips which fuel our hunger for information and entertainment every day. In this course, we will take a detailed look at 'unit processes' that are used for building these electronic components. Topics to be covered include crystal growth and doping of wafers, oxidation and diffusion, ion implantation, deposition, etching, cleaning and lithography. First, we will invoke concepts from science and engineering to study each of these processes separately. Thereafter, the instruction will be devoted to issues of process integration, where you will learn to appreciate and finally design your own 'process flow' for building a wide variety of electronic devices such as transistors and light emitting diodes (LEDs). Where relevant, concepts in nanotechnology-based processing will be highlighted to show the extreme nature of engineering in designing increasingly tiny and faster chips.

Prerequisites: Undergraduate engineering mathematics or calculus, materials science and basic electronics or instructor's permission. 3 units.

Books: 1. Fabrication Engineering at the Micro and Nanoscale, 3rd edition, Stephen A. Campbell, Oxford University Press 2008, 2. Nanostructures and Nanomaterials – Synthesis, Properties and Applications, 2nd edition, Guozhong Cao & Ying Wang, World Scientific, 2011.

Abstract:
Assistant Professor Parag Banerjee will offer "Electronic Materials Processing." Professor Banerjee joined WUSTL in July 2011 after completing his PhD under the supervision of Professor Gary W. Rubloff at the University of Maryland.
ImageUrl: http://admin.seas.wustl.edu/ContentImages/newsphotos/Banerjee_news_article_72.jpg
DateAdded: 8/3/2011

Tiny whispering gallery

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By Diana Lutz

Nanotechnology has already made it to the shelves of your local pharmacy and grocery: nanoparticles are found in anti-odor socks, makeup, makeup remover, sunscreen, anti-graffiti paint, home pregnancy tests, plastic beer bottles, anti-bacterial doorknobs, plastic bags for storing vegetables, and more than 800 other products.

How safe are these products and the flood of new ones about to spill out of labs across the world? A group of researchers at Washington University is devising instruments and protocols to assess the impact of nanoparticles on the environment and human health before they are sent to market.
As part of this effort, a team led by Lan Yang, Ph.D., assistant professor of electrical and systems engineering, has devised a sensor on a chip that can not only detect but also measure single particles. They expect the sensor will be able to measure nanoparticles smaller than 100 nanometers in diameter (about the size of a virus particle) on the fly.
The new sensor, an improved version of a sensor called a whispering-gallery microresonator, is described in the December 13 edition of Nature Photonics's advanced online publication.
 
The sensor belongs to a class of devices charmingly called whispering-gallery-mode resonators.
 
One famous whispering gallery is St. Paul's Cathedral in London. If you stand under the dome close to the wall and speak softly to the wall, someone on the opposite side of the gallery is able to hear what you say.
 
The reason is the sound bounces along the wall of the gallery with very little loss of energy and so can be heard at a great distance.
 
However, if you speak at normal volume, what you say can no longer be understood. The sound travels around the dome more than once, and the recirculating signal gets mixed up and garbled.
In a miniature version of a whispering gallery, laser light is coupled into a circular "waveguide," such as a glass ring. When the light strikes the boundary of the ring at a grazing angle it is reflected back into the ring.
The light wave can make many trips around the ring before it is absorbed, but only frequencies of light that fit perfectly into the circumference of the ring can do so. If the circumference is a whole number of wavelengths, the light waves superimpose perfectly each trip around.
 
This perfect match between the frequency and the circumference is called a resonance, or whispering-gallery mode.
 
The glass resonator can serve as a particle detector because the faint outer edge of the light wave, called its "evanescent tail, " penetrates the ring's surface, probing the surroundings. So when a particle attaches to the ring, it disturbs the light wave, changing the resonant frequency. This change can be used to measure the size of the particle.
 
There are two problems with these microresonators, says Yang. One is that they are finicky. Lots of things can shift the resonant frequency, including vibration or temperature changes.
 
The other is that the frequency shift depends on where the particle lands on the ring. A particle that happens to land on a node (the dark blue areas reflected on the base of the pedestal in the accompanying image) will disturb the light wave less and appear smaller than a particle of the same size that happens to land on an anti-node (the red spots visible on the base).
 
For this reason the frequency shift is not a reliable measure of particle size.
 
The way around these problems is a self-referring sensing scheme possible only in an exceptionally good resonator, one with virtually no optical flaws.
Yang's lab uses surface tension to achieve the necessary perfection. The microresonators are etched out of glass layers on silicon wafers by techniques borrowed from the integrated circuit industry. These techniques allow the rings to be mass produced but leave them with rough surfaces.
In a crucial finishing step, the microresonators are reheated with a pulsed laser until the glass reflows. Surface tension then pulls the rings into smooth toruses.
 
"Nature helps us create the perfect structure," says Yang.
"This quality factor gives the sensor a resonance as beautiful as the pure tone form the finest musical instrument," says Jiangang Zhu, a graduate student in Yang's lab.
 
The Q value, or quality factor, of the reflowed resonators, a measure of microscopic imperfections that sap energy from the resonating mode, is about 100 million, meaning that light circles the ring many time. Because recirculation dramatically increases the interaction of the light wave and particles on the ring's surface, a different approach to particle detection is possible: mode splitting.
Each whispering-gallery mode is actually two modes: the light travels both clockwise and counterclockwise around the resonator. These modes are usually "degenerate," meaning they have the same frequency.
When a particle lands on a resonator, it acts as a scattering center that couples energy between the modes. The two modes re-arrange themselves so that the particle lies on a node of one and an anti-node of the other. As a result, one wave is much more perturbed than the other, and this "lifts the degeneracy," or "splits the mode."
 
In a low-Q resonator, the split mode can't be resolved. But in the high-Q resonator it is easily seen.
 
A sensor that relies on mode splitting is much less finicky than a frequency-shifting sensor. Because the clockwise and counterclockwise light waves share the same resonator, they share the same noise. Any jitter or jiggle that biases one biases the other by the same amount. Because it is self-referring, the sensor is more accurate and reliable.
 
Mode splitting also solves the particle location problem. The light scattering that perturbs the mode also broadens it. The mode split still varies with the location of the particle, but the ratio of the mode split and the difference between the linewidths (the breadth) of the two modes depends only on the particle's size.
To test the sensor, Daren Chen, Ph.D., associate professor of energy, environmental and chemical engineering, helped the team generate nanoparticles within specific size ranges. In experiments with nanoparticles of salt or nanospheres of plastic, the resonator's size estimates were within one or two percent of the actual values.
"Size is a key parameter that significantly affects the physical and chemical properties of nanoparticles," says Yang. "It plays a crucial role in the applications of nanoparticles both in science and in industry, all of which will benefit from the ability to measure these particles accurately."
 
This work is partially supported by the McDonnell Academy Global Energy and Environment Partnership and the Center for Materials Innovation at Washington University.
 
Jiangang Zhu, Sahin Kaya Ozdemir, Yun-Feng Xioa, Lin Li, Lina He, Da-Ren Chen and Lan Yang, "On-chip Single Nanoparticle Detection and Sizing by Mode splitting in an Ultra-high-Q Microresonator, Nature Photonics, advanced online edition, Dec. 13, 2009.
Abstract:
A WUSTL research team, led by Assistant Professor Lan Yang, has devised a sensor on a chip that can not only detect but also measure single particles. They expect the sensor will be able to measure nanoparticles smaller than 100 nanometers in diameter on the fly.
ImageUrl: http://admin.seas.wustl.edu/ContentImages/newsphotos/yang-research2_newsart_72.jpg
DateAdded: 12/31/2009

Professor Pratim Biswas to participate in Oct. 26 sustainability symposium

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Professor Pratim Biswas will serve as a panelist in the symposium "The Sustainability Challenge: Local to Global" along with other Washington University faculty, members of industry and representatives of local government.

The symposium is being held in conjunction with Campus Sustainability Day, which will include a bike ride around Forest Park, a locally sourced dinner at Ibby's, and a guided arbor tour of the Danforth Campus.

Hosted by University College, the symposium will cover the challenges faced by the environment, community development and organizational life. Robert E. Wiltenburg, dean of University College, will moderate the discussion.

The symposium, which is free and open to the public, is Tuesday, October 26 in Steinberg Hall Auditorium.

Abstract:
The symposium, which is free and open to the public, is Tuesday, October 26 at 7 p.m. in Steinberg Hall Auditorium, was planned in conjunction with Campus Sustainability Day.
ImageUrl: http://admin.seas.wustl.edu/contentimages/newsphotos/Pratim_newsarticle_72.jpg
DateAdded: 10/18/2010

Nanotechnology conference draws scientists from across the state

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Scientists from across Missouri will meet Wednesday, Oct. 27, at Washington University in St. Louis to learn — in one jam-packed day — about the latest advances in nanotechnology and opportunities for commercializing them.

Organized by seven Missouri universities, the 2nd Annual Missouri NanoFrontiers Symposium is co-hosted by Washington University and the University of Missouri-St. Louis and begins at 7:45 a.m. in Whitaker Hall on the Danforth Campus. The meeting is free and open to the public.

WUSTL Chancellor Mark S. Wrighton, Robert Duncan, PhD, vice-chancellor of the University of Missouri-Columbia and Thomas F. George, PhD, chancellor of the University of Missouri-St. Louis will welcome participants to the symposium.

Their remarks will be followed by two keynote addresses.

The first, “Self-Powered Nanosensors for Medical Science, Environmental Monitoring and Personal Electronics,” will be delivered by Zhong Lin Wang, PhD, director of the Center for Nanostructure Characterization at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Missouri Sen. Christopher S. “Kit” Bond will deliver the second address and discuss the role of nanotechnology ventures to Missouri’s economic development.

Technical sessions will address nanomedicine, technologies for sensing nanoparticles, nanostructures for energy applications and new nanomaterials.

"At lunch, participants will have the opportunity to tour WUSTL’s Nano Research Facility (NRF) (see nano.wustl.edu for more information.). The university invested in the facility after it was invited to join the 14-member National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network (NNIN)," says Dong Qin, PhD, associate dean for research in the School of Engineering & Applied Science, and NNIN site director.

Qin characterizes the facility — open to scientists from other institutions and from private corporations — as “a machine shop” for nanotechnologists, which brings together the instruments and technical expertise needed to manipulate materials at the nanoscale (in billionths of a meter) and develop functional devices. The NRF will play an important role in a new nanotechnology minor for WUSTL undergraduates for which the National Science Foundation has just provided a start-up grant.

The final session, a panel moderated by Jingyue (Jimmy) Liu, PhD, director of the Center for Nanoscience at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, will address the role of the government and ways to engage the corporate community in commercializing nanotechnology.

Participants can register at surveymonkey.com/s/nanofrontiersregistration.

Abstract:
Organized by seven Missouri universities, the 2nd Annual Missouri NanoFrontiers Symposium offered sessions on the latest advances in nanotechnology and opportunities for commercializing them.
ImageUrl: http://admin.seas.wustl.edu/ContentImages/newsphotos/nano_tube_news_article_72.jpg
DateAdded: 10/27/2010

Computer Science & Engineering welcomes 2011 PhD class

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The Department of Computer Science & Engineering is pleased to announce its most talented, diverse incoming PhD class. 

In an incoming class of 14 students, we welcome winners of prestigious national and university fellowships including one Olin Scholar and three NSF Graduate Fellows. In addition, four are alumni of the department’s summer Research Experience for Undergraduates. Finally, our incoming class includes seven women, contributing to the intellectual diversity of our department.

Abstract:
In an incoming class of 14 students, including three NSF Graduate Fellows, four alumni of WUSTL undergraduate summer research programs and seven women.
ImageUrl: http://admin.seas.wustl.edu/ContentImages/newsphotos/campus_newsart_72.jpg
DateAdded: 8/9/2011

Alumni honored by American Academy of Environmental Engineers

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The American Academy of Environmental Engineers (AAEE) honored two Engineering alumni at the AAEE Awards Banquet in Washington, D.C.

Lilia Abron, SI '68, and her company Peer Consultants, won the Superior Achievement Award for their work on the Witsand iEEECO TM (integrated energy environment empowerment-cost optimization) Sustainable Human Settlement.
 
Otis Sproul, SI '61, received the Gordon Maskew Fair Award, which honors an environmental engineer who demonstrates exemplary professional conduct, has recognized achievements in the practice of engineering and has made significant contributions to the control of the quality of the world's environment.
 
Abstract:
Otis Sproul, SI '61, won the Gordon Maskew Fair Award, and Lilia Abron, SI '68, and her company Peer Consultants, won the Superior Achievement Award.
DateAdded: 5/8/2012

Alumnus honored by Academy of Science of St. Louis

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Alexander Rubin, DSc, was presented with The James B. Eads Award for outstanding achievement in technology or engineering.

Rubin is currently a senior technical fellow with Boeing Research and Technology at The Boeing Company and is a member of the Department of Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science Alumni Advisory Board.
 

Rubin is an internationally renowned expert in composite materials, structures and analysis. His work in thermoplastic composites led to key international partnerships with the first widespread implementation of structural thermoplastic components on military and commercial aerospace.

Abstract:
The James B. Eads Award for outstanding achievement in technology or engineering was presented to Alexander Rubin.
DateAdded: 3/15/2011

Professor David Peters receives AIAA’s highest honor

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David Peters, the McDonnell Douglas Professor of Engineering in the School of Engineering & Applied Science at Washington University in St. Louis, has received the Reed Aeronautics Award for 2011 from the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA).

The Reed Aeronautics Award is the highest award an individual can receive for achievements in the field of aeronautical science and engineering. Peters received the award “for outstanding contributions to the advancement of rotary wing unsteady aerodynamic theory and applications to design.”

“It didn’t take long after I became dean for me to learn that Dave Peters is one of our most recognized scholars for his seminal contributions to the design of airplane propellers and helicopter rotors,” says Ralph S. Quatrano, PhD, the Spencer T. Olin Professor and dean of the School of Engineering & Applied Science. “We are extremely proud of Dave and this very deserved recognition.”

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The award is named for Sylvanus A. Reed, an early aeronautical engineer, founding member of the organization that became the AIAA, and the first to develop a propeller system composed of metal rather than wood. His aluminum alloy propeller gave Jimmy Doolittle’s plane the speed it needed to win the 1925 Schneider Cup race.

Peters is director of WUSTL’s Center for Computational Mechanics and the associate director of the Georgia Tech University/Washington University Center of Excellence for Rotor Technology. He also is an adjunct professor at Georgia Tech, where he taught before joining the WUSTL faculty.

Peters research interest is computational modeling of the dynamics of the wakes created by airplane propellers and helicopter rotors in order to predict their effect on the aircraft.

As a sideline, he analyzes the physics and aerodynamics of baseball, explaining why ballpark design is biased toward the lefthander and why it’s faster to slide into bases head-first rather than feet-first.

Peters will receive the award at the AIAA Aerospace Spotlight Awards Gala, a black-tie event to be held May 11 in Washington, D.C.

For the award ceremony, Peters was asked to prepare a video introduction describing the moment when space and flight first captured his imagination. (The AIAA has been collecting and posting its members replies to this question on a web page titled “When Did You Know?” for the past year.  Peters’ videotaped response follows.

AIAA is the world’s largest technical society dedicated to the aerospace profession with more than 35,000 members worldwide. 
 
 
Abstract:
The Reed Aeronautics Award is the highest award an individual can receive for achievements in the field of aeronautical science and engineering.
ImageUrl: http://admin.seas.wustl.edu/contentimages/newsphotos/Peters_newsart_72.jpg
DateAdded: 2/11/2011

Development of mini-cyclones

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By Professor Daren Chen

Substantive evidence has indicated that common human diseases, such as asthma, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer, result from a complex interplay between genes and environmental factors, including chemical, particulate, and biological toxins. NIH had thus launched an institute-wide Genes and Environment Initiative (GEI) to understand such interaction between genes and environmental factors. However, much uncertainty is encountered in the surveyed data from population studies aimed at investigating the role of gene-environmental interaction in human health and disease, primarily due to the lack of measurement tools for assessing a person’s exposure to these toxins.

With the support of GEI, a variety of environmental sensors are currently under the development. A miniaturized condensation particle counter (mini-CPC) is thus being developed for monitoring the number concentration of particles with diameters less than 1m. As a part of the mini-CPC development, mini-cyclones will be used as the size selector included in the compact package of the mini-CPC. Further, personal assessment of particulate exposure is in strong demand for epidemiological studies in general. With the increasing evidence of the toxicity of nanoparticles, one of the building blocks for nanotechnology, the need for a miniature particle detecting device enabling nanoparticle monitoring at the personal level is gaining much attention, particularly for worker protection in nanoparticle manufacturing facilities. Light scattering and electrical mobility techniques have been implemented in these miniature particle detection devices for monitoring submicron particles. The presence of large particles in the sampling stream, however, affects the performance of these mini-detectors. Prototype mini-cyclones were thus developed as a size-selective inlet for mini-particle detectors.

In this study, we have developed two “quarter-sized” mini-cyclones, (shown in Figure 1) to remove particles larger than 1.0 and 0.3µm at a flow rate of 0.3 lpm. The performance of miniature cyclones has been experimentally evaluated using the laboratory generation particles. It has been experimentally demonstrated that the cutoff particle sizes (i.e., the particle size with the 50 percent particle penetration) of two prototypes are 1.0 and 0.3m at 0.3 lpm aerosol flow. The performance of prototypes was also compared with that of existing personal sampling cyclones. The comparison shows that mini-cyclones has a similar or better performance than existed ones despite its compact size. Further, the empirical models to estimate the performance of the prototype mini-cyclone (i.e., the 50 percent cutoff particle size and pressure drop) were also established by the regression analysis of the data collected in this development. The developed linear regression model can serve as the tool for the future design of mini-cyclones with similar size and configuration.

Abstract:
With the increasing evidence of the toxicity of nanoparticles, the need for a miniature particle detecting device enabling nanoparticle monitoring at the personal level is gaining attention.
ImageUrl: http://eece.wustl.edu/ContentImages/Chen_research_newsart_72.jpg
DateAdded: 9/9/2009

Junior Jumpstart is May 10

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Junior Jumpstart is one-day workshop for juniors to explore professional, academic, travel and public service opportunities following graduation.

Junior Jumpstart will include sessions about: 
 
  • Launching a job search
  • Medical and law school applications
  • PhD and Master’s programs
  • Rhodes and Fulbright Scholarships
  • Workshops for undecided students
  • Other post-graduation options
  • Networking with WUSTL alumni at a reception

 

"Junior Jumpstart was a fun and useful way to end junior year. As someone applying to graduate/medical school, it was timely advice for kicking off application season. There was a great variety of sessions available — even (or perhaps especially) if you don't know what you want to do with your engineering degree, there will be speakers that get your ideas flowing and point you toward many other resources. If that's not enough to convince you, the speakers were entertaining, there was free food, and they had a raffle with great prizes (I won a $50 Visa gift card)," said Kelly Hill, Biomedical Engineering class of 2012.

 

Registration is $40 and includes all materials, breakfast, lunch and the networking reception. The deadline for early registration is March 31. Students should register online: juniorjumpstart.wustl.edu.

Abstract:
A one-day workshop for juniors, Junior Jumpstart, is designed for students to explore professional, academic, travel and public service opportunities following graduation.
DateAdded: 3/7/2012

Engineering student uses soccer to empower female students in Uganda

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This excerpt appears courtesy of <a href='http://magazine.wustl.edu/Pages/default.aspx.'>magazine.wustl.edu.</a>

Soccer and self-reflection empower female students in Uganda

Melissa Cochran, Engineering Class of ’12
Major: mechanical engineering; minor: public health
2010 Stern Social Change Grant

Most of us (excluding the traveler herself) would call Melissa Cochran’s three-day journey to launch her project a feat in itself: flying from hometown New Orleans to Washington, D.C.; New York; Dubai; Ethiopia — and finally, Africa’s Republic of Uganda. The trip was not Cochran’s first: She lived at an orphanage in the town of Nansana in summer 2008 and 2009, while teaching English and math at Nansana Community Primary School — the venue for her Social Change Grant. (Her first two trips followed fundraising she did in New Orleans that produced more than $5,000, sponsors for eight scholarships for the secondary schools — and donations for two cows to provide milk and income for the school.) For Cochran’s project in summer 2010, New Orleans schools contributed “about 500 uniforms and tons of soccer cleats and old shin guards.”

Through her grant project, Cochran addressed the dormant potential of Ugandan female students. She used soccer to empower the elementary school students, most of them orphans about 12 to 20 years old, who had had little previous schooling and no experience playing competitive team sports. Research shows that such activity improves self-esteem, academics and motivation. Engaging in team sports also correlates with lower rates of depression and of high-risk sexual behavior.

Cochran’s breakthrough project sparked a transformation. She introduced fitness and skills training, team bonding and competition — and she developed team leaders to sustain the progress. The girls and young women also developed self-awareness through writing journals, reading books about female athletes, watching inspirational sports movies, and discussing these subjects in groups.

Abstract:
Melissa Cochran received a 2010 Stern Social Change Grant for her project to address the education and athletic capabilities of Ugandan elementary school students.
DateAdded: 10/15/2010
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