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Yuxin Chen, Graduate Student Instructor and Graduate Student Research Assistant in Mechanical Engineering, tries to verify lithium metal, solid-state batteries which use a solid electrolyte instead of the currently used flammable liquid electrolyte, inside the Battery Fabrication and Characterization User Facility at the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory at 2301 Bonisteel Blvd, at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on Friday May 7, 2021.
The University of Michigan is researching ways to harness abundant materials for battery production, or reuse older materials to relieve the disproportionate pressure placed on countries like the Democratic Republic of Congo for cobalt or the Philippines for nickel.
Photo: Robert Coelius/University of Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Middle and High School Students and their parents attend the AERO Workshop as part of Discover Engineering on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on August 1, 2019.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Emine Sumeyra Turali-Emre, Ph.D Candidate in Biomedical Engineering, discusses her research on iron sulfide supraparticles as artificial viruses for gene and gene editing therapies with Rose Saryon, an Engineering Graduate Student visiting from Africa.
With over 400 participants, alumni, and students from around the world, the 13th annual Engineering Graduate Symposium was held inside the Duderstadt Center on Friday October 26, 2018.
Photo by Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Yi Lu, member of Robert H. Lurie Professor of Mechanical Engineering Jyoti Mazumder's Center for Laser-Aided Intelligent Manufacturing, runs a laser deposition system to construct and analyze a metallic alloy in the G.G. Brown Building on December 17, 2018.
The alloy is part of the Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration's efforts to create processes and build materials that will help maintain the U.S.'s standing as a military superpower.
Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing
A plasma thruster by the MAISE student group at Tech Takeover on Ingalls Mall in Ann Arbor, MI on September 21, 2018.
The event was hosted before a live screening of 2001: A Space Odyssey and showcased the U-M Robotics Institute and a panel discussing the technology and implications of the film.
Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing
Staff, faculty, students, and residents of Ann Arbor attend a live showing of 2001: A Space Odyssey at Hill Auditorium in Ann Arbor, MI on September 21, 2018.
The event was a collaboration between Michigan Engineering and the University Musical Society, bringing the Detroit Symphony Orchestra to perform in conjunction with a showing of the movie.
Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing
Maria Redoutey, Graduate Student Research Assistant at Civil and Environmental Engineering, works on developing small scale functional actuators to be used in micro-robotics inside Evgueni Filipov’s laboratory located at 2144 GG Brown on North Campus Ann Arbor, MI. on Wednesday, February 27, 2018.
Many components of micro-robots must be fabricated in a flat sheet due to their size (on the order of micrometers). This results in a limited range of motion, especially in out-of-plane bending, which is needed for many robot movements such as walking or gripping. If the micro-robots could be fabricated in a flat sheet and then reconfigure on their own into a 3D shape, their ranges of motion could be greatly increased.
Redoutey is working with a shape memory polymer that is 3D printed on top of a flexible polymer. When the materials are heated, the stress releases and folds at the clear hinges into a 3D box.
Photo by Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Colorado State University's College of Health and Human Sciences celebrates its graduates at the Spring 2022 Commencement. May 15, 2022
Michigan Engineering Graduate Students attend the Graduate Student Orientation at the Power Center for the Performing Arts in Ann Arbor, MI on August 29, 2018.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Graduates from the department of Biomedical Engineering in Colorado State University's Walter Scott Jr. College of Engineering at the Spring 2022 Commencement. May 14, 2022
Graduate student Ali Giese after exiting the C-130 Hercules plane that transports the IGERT scientists to Summit Station, a research center at the apex of the Greenland ice sheet. (photo by Courtney Hammond ’11)
Cassandra Champagne (right), Graduate Student Research Assistant in Civil and Environmental Engineering, and Chenghang Liu, Civil Engineering Undergraduate, deploy a commercially available DJI Phantom 4 drone.
Instrumented with standard optical cameras and a third-party infrared camera, these drones can be programmed to run autonomously and can generate extremely accurate 3-D models of the landfill that can track increased biodegradation activity as well as monitor the settlement of the landfill over time.
The project, run by CEE Professor Dimitrios Zekkos, plans to input this imagery data, with weather station data, into a computational machine learning model to generate spatial maps of methane concentration.
Photo: Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Alaa Algargoosh (right), Architecture PhD Student, learns how to fly a quadcopter drone at Tech Takeover on Ingalls Mall in Ann Arbor, MI on September 21, 2018.
The event was hosted before a live screening of 2001: A Space Odyssey and showcased the U-M Robotics Institute and a panel discussing the technology and implications of the film.
Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing
Corliss "Coco" Raymond (center), 68, walks with University of Michigan researchers in a predetermined route as part of research project at Clark East Tower, a senior care housing facility, in Ypsilanti, MI on September 6, 2018.
Raymond is a research participant in a project run by CEE Professor SangHyun Lee research group in which researchers track the varying stress levels of senior citizens induced by their physical environments. Participants wear sensors that track heart and perspiration rates, and blood pressure as they move outside of the facility in a variety of environments.
Raymond suffers from Neurofibromatosis, a condition that causes tumors to grow externally and internally. In the last six months, Raymond has felt more pain in her knees and calves and is fearful that the tumors and their potential bursting is causing this pain.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Yi Bao, Manager of the Advanced Civil Engineering - Materials Research Laboratory at the University of Michigan's College of Engineering gives a walking demonstration on the world's first "Lego"-inspired footbridge inside the Structures Lab on North Campus in Ann Arbor, MI. on June 14, 2019.
Designed and constructed by Bao, this prototype bridge is made up of 31 interlocking blocks secured with nuts and bolts for quick assembly. The blocks themselves are made of Engineered Cementitious Composite (ECC), or "bendable concrete", which is more ductile and more durable than traditional concrete.
The footbridge is designed for total reuse. The blocks can be easily disassembled and reassembled into a new configuration, rather than being discarded. Just like Lego bricks, they can be used again and again to create new structures as needs change.
Photo by Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Zhen Xu, Graduate Student Research Assistant for Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (left) and Dehui Zhang, Graduate Student Research Assistant for Electrical & Computer Engineering measuring focal stack images of a point object simulated by focusing a green laser beam onto a graphene-based transparent photodetector array inside Ted Norris’ lab on North Campus in Ann Arbor, MI on January 27, 2021.
Graphene detectors produce surprisingly high photoresponse while only absorbing a very small portion of light. U-M researchers are fabricating a prototype of transparent photodetector arrays to demonstrate its potential applications in 3D object tracking tasks used most commonly in autonomous driving and robotics.
Photo by: Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Clive D'Souza, Assistant Professor of Industrial and Operations Engineering, and his group of researchers work with study participants with differing physical accessibility issues to study their comfort and usability of an autonomous shuttle at the Ann Arbor Center for Independent Living in Ann Arbor, MI on August 22, 2019.
D'Souza and his team make physical measurements and have participants go in and out of the autonomous vehicle in order to test its accessibility and usability for their preferences.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Gaang Lee, Civil Engineering PhD Student, surveys Phyllis Quint, a research participant and resident of Clark East Tower, an independent living senior care housing facility, about her physical stress levels in a predetermined test route in Ypsilanti, MI on September 6, 2018.
Lee is administering a project as part of CEE Professor SangHyun Lee research group in which they track the varying stress levels induced by their physical environments. Participants wear sensors that track heart and perspiration rates, and blood pressure as they move outside of the facility in a variety of environments.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Middle and High School Students and their parents attend the AERO Workshop as part of Discover Engineering on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on August 1, 2019.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
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Laura Andre, ECE PhD Student, speaks at the Michigan Engineering Graduate Student Orientation at Hill Auditorium on Central Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on August 29, 2019.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Students register to vote at the impactXchange on North Campus of the University of Michigan on October 9, 2018.
The impactXchange was a celebration that aimed to get students to vote and was a collaboration among the College of Engineering, Stamps School of Art & Design, Duderstadt Center, School of Music, Theater and Dance, Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning and the Rackham Student Government.
Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing
Wesleyan welcomed 162 graduate students to campus this fall, of which 60 are new.
The new international graduate students hail from Bangladesh, Trinidad and Tobago, the United Kingdom, Nepal, Chile, and Turkey.
Graduate students gathered with faculty advisors for a welcome picnic on Aug 27. (Photos by Prekshaw Sreewastav '21)
All photos provided are the property of Creative Services and may not be used without permission.
Please contact creative@jmu.edu if you are interested in using any photos included in our collection.
A panel discussing college resources and services for graduate students is held at the Michigan Engineering Graduate Student Orientation at Hill Auditorium on Central Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on August 29, 2019.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Middle and High School Students and their parents attend the ChE Workshop as part of Discover Engineering on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on August 1, 2019.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Elissa Welle, Graduate Student Research Assistant in Biomedical Engineering, prepares to sharpen an array that has four carbon fiber electrodes attached to it at Professor Cindy Chestek’s Cortical Neural Prosthetics lab inside North Campus Research Center in Ann Arbor, MI on Friday June 11, 2021.
The carbon fibers are originally cylindrical wires with a flat end but are made sharp through the heat of the butane flame. The rest of the array, composed of medical-grade silicone, a polyimide printed circuit board, four 50-um diameter wires, and an Omnetics connector, is kept safely under the water, which acts as a flame retardant. Once sharp, the electrodes insert easily into lots of different types of biological tissue - nerves, the brain, the dorsal root ganglia - that typical flat-ended wires cannot penetrate.
Photo: Robert Coelius/University of Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Middle and High School Students and their parents attend the AERO Workshop as part of Discover Engineering on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on August 1, 2019.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Nathanael England (right), AERO PhD Student, explains what a cubesat is at Tech Takeover on Ingalls Mall in Ann Arbor, MI on September 21, 2018.
The event was hosted before a live screening of 2001: A Space Odyssey and showcased the U-M Robotics Institute and a panel discussing the technology and implications of the film.
Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing
LiFang Tseng (translator) Professor of Philosophy Shu-Ju Yu (Conference Organiser), and Wei-Lin Koo (graduate student, my guide, and Assistant Conference Organiser) in Taipei, Taiwan
Duke Morrow, 62, participates in a study about autonomous vehicle accessibility with Clive D'Souza, Assistant Professor of Industrial and Operations Engineering, and his group of researchers at the Ann Arbor Center for Independent Living in Ann Arbor, MI on August 22, 2019.
D'Souza and his team make physical measurements and have participants go in and out of the autonomous vehicle in order to test its accessibility and usability for their preferences.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Cassandra Champagne, Graduate Student Research Assistant in Civil and Environmental Engineering, takes a standard measurement of methane gas emissions inside a landfill in Midland, MI. on October 16, 2018.
Using drones, Champagne and her team are implementing techniques for monitoring methane gas emissions in a manner more time efficient, cost efficient, and accurate than current practices.
Landfills are required to measure surface methane concentrations but not methane emissions. The EPA provides a model called LandGEM (Landfill Gas Emissions Model) to estimate the CH4 emissions but the problem is that this model is not based on, nor officially validated by, robust field measurements.
Photo: Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Drones are flown the first flight of M-Air, an advanced robotics testing facility for air, sea, and land, on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on February 20, 2018.
The facility is a netted, 9,600 gross square ft., four-story complex situated next to the site where the Ford Motor Company Robotics Building will open in late 2019.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
A bystander intervention workshop is run at the Michigan Engineering Graduate Student Orientation at Hill Auditorium on Central Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on August 29, 2019.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
A panel discussing college resources and services for graduate students is held at the Michigan Engineering Graduate Student Orientation at Hill Auditorium on Central Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on August 29, 2019.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Minjeong Cha, MSE PhD Student, holds a gel made up of chiromagnetic nanoparticles that are a conduit for modulating light in the North Campus Research Complex on January 15, 2018.
The new material could potentially help expand use of magnetic fields to modulate light and be used in cutting-edge technologies such as communication in space, optical wireless networks, and sensing for autonomous vehicles.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
White Coat Ceremony
Langford Auditorium
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Photo: Anne Rayner
Yi Bao, Manager of the Advanced Civil Engineering - Materials Research Laboratory at the University of Michigan's College of Engineering, begins construction on the world's first concrete "Lego" inspired footbridge inside the Structures Lab on North Campus in Ann Arbor, MI. on May 22, 2019.
This prototype bridge is made up of 31 interlocking blocks secured with nuts and bolts for quick assembly. The blocks themselves are made of Engineered Cementitious Composite (ECC), or "bendable concrete", which is more ductile and more durable than traditional concrete.
The footbridge is designed for total reuse. The blocks can be easily disassembled and reassembled into a new configuration, rather than being discarded. Just like Lego bricks, they can be used again and again to create new structures as needs change.
Photo by Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
International Center - Sponsored Affiliate Bin Wang (left) demonstrates a deployable and reconfigurable structural systems inside Civil and Environmental Enginering Professor Evgueni Filipov's lab at 2144 GG Brown on North Campus in Ann Arbor, MI. on Friday January 25, 2019.
Professor Filipov's lab was part of CEE's open house which was geared towards undergraduate CEE majors, and undeclared CoE freshmen.
The main motivation for this event was feedback from the CEE undergraduates who felt like there was a divide in the department between undergraduate coursework and faculty/graduate research.
Photo by Michigan Engineering/Robert Coelius, Communications and Marketing
Middle and High School Students and their parents attend the AERO Workshop as part of Discover Engineering on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on August 1, 2019.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Tierra Bills, CEE Assistant Professor, and her group of researchers are working with Twin City Authorities, which provides transportation services to Benton Harbor, to help streamline the service by administering surveys and tracking the pathways of its citizens via a mobile application and a physical GPS tracker to help collect analytics to restructure the current transit system.
Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing