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Graduate students display their research at the Graduate Research and Creativity Showcase. November 9, 2017
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
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
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
Cangaco Capoeira, a student performance group, performs at the cultureXchange: Celebrating diversity through shared experience on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on November 8, 2017.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Molong Duon and Deokkyun Yoon, both mechanical engineering PhD students, and Chinedum Okwudire, associate professor in mechanical engineering, have developed what they call "filtered b-spline" algorithms to speed up consumer 3-D printers without sacrificing quality.
Desktop 3-D printers often use light and flexible parts to save costs and stay affordable, but this allows for unwanted flexing and vibrations when the movement of the printhead is accelerated. These vibrations can offset the printhead, and because the printer uses a stepper motor, it won't know there is a problem and will keep printing, resulting in an incredibly deformed final product.
The Michigan Engineering researchers developed algorithms that take into account the dynamics of the printer and refine the movement of the printhead and platform to mitigate vibration errors.
Photo: Evan Dougherty, Assistant Multimedia Editor - Michigan Engineering
Colorado State University's College of Health and Human Sciences celebrates its graduates at the Spring 2022 Commencement. May 15, 2022
CEE Graduate Student Research Assistant Gaang Lee (left) applies wearable technologies such as IMU sensors and biosensors to identify fall risk, physical fatigue and heat stress at the Alexander G. Ruthven construction site in Ann Arbor, MI. on September 19, 2019.
This pilot study, run by CEE Professor SangHyun Lee, explores how wearable technologies can be applied to identify important risks, thereby preventing a potential accident.
Photo: Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Juan Lopez, MSE Post-Doc, holds a FeBi2Se4 selenide in the H.H. Dow Building on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on June 21, 2019.
Lopez and members of Associate Professor of Materials Science and Engineering Pierre Ferdinand Poudeu-Poudeu's group, engineer magnetic transitions in ferromagnetic semiconductors through chemical manipulation of spatial separation between magnetic centers.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Valeriy Ivanov, CEE Associate Professor, works to install sensors in the Amazon Rainforest outside of Santarém, Brazil on October 30, 2018.
Ivanov aims to collect water flow data from the trees to build a model that will help us gain an understanding of our push and pull on the region, and how it potentially affects the world’s climate.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Colorado State University's College of Liberal Arts celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022
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
Colorado State University's College of Health and Human Sciences celebrates its graduates at the Spring 2022 Commencement. May 15, 2022
"I'm glad I came to Duke because the faculty really seem to care about our well-being and fostering an intellectually stimulating environment."
Specialties:
Chemical Physics
Nanophysics
Current projects: IR Driven Electron Tunneling, Inverse Ligand Design
Research Description: I study the dynamics of electron tunneling in molecular donor-bridge-acceptor systems.
Electron tunneling is one way for electrons to move from one place to another within the realm of quantum mechanics i.e. electron tunneling is not described by classical mechanics. When an electron is excited from the ground state of a molecule to some excited state, it will eventually relax back down. There may be several steps in the relaxation process and one of these is electron transfer to some other part of the molecule. At low temperatures and/or high energetic barriers between the electron donating part of the molecule and the accepting part, tunneling dominates the transfer process. My work focuses on how interactions between
the tunneling electron and atomic vibrational modes in the molecule can influence the electron transfer rate. Specifically, I look at how the rate changes when vibrational modes are excited by a laser, before and during the electron transfer process. We know these electron-vibron interactions alter the dynamics, but we believe we can promote more electron-vibron interactions by placing the vibrational modes in an excited state, and thereby have some control over the electron transfer process. Electron transfer is ubiquitous in biological systems, but the most promising applications appear to be in artifical photosynthesis for solar energy
Areas of Interest:
Chemical Physics
Nanophysics
Nanosynthesis
Colorado State University's College of Liberal Arts celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022
Huanting Huang, Graduate Student Research Assistant in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, discusses her research on full wave simulations of vegetation and forest effects in microwave remote sensing in soil moisture for the Richard and Eleanor Towner Prize for Outstanding Ph.D. Research at the 2018 Engineering Graduate Symposium in the Duderstadt Gallery on North Campus in Ann Arbor, MI. on Friday October 26, 2018.
With over 400 participants, alumni, and visiting students from around the world, the 13th annual Engineering Graduate Symposium brings research, networking and recruitment to North Campus.
Photo by Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Alec D. Gallimore, the Robert J. Vlasic Dean of Engineering at the University of Michigan, addresses students at the Graduate Student Orientation in Stamps Auditorium on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Tuesday, August 23, 2022.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Kaihua Zhang, Graduate Student Research Assistant from Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering, simulates marine structures in real world degradation while recording the crack length using UV light and a GoPro camera inside the Gerstacker Engineering Research Building at the Materials Science and Engineering Lab Room 1020 on Wednesday, February 6, 2019.
Photos of the crack are quickly analyzed by computer vision algorithms to calculate the length. The developed method can be applied to ships for monitoring structural health.
Photo by Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Necmiye Ozay, an assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer science talks to Lars Petter Nilsson, EECES Graduate Student Research Assistant, and her group testing their software at Mcity - U-M's model town for autonomous vehicles. Unlike most driverless cars, which are programmed by humans, Ozay's method uses a form of artificial intelligence. Given the vehicle specs, the rules of the road, and the laws of physics, their algorithm can program the car to drive safely.
Photo by Robert Coelius
Multimedia Producer
Communications and Marketing
College of Engineering
@UMengineering
USGS and members of the DROP Lab (droplab.engin.umich.edu) embark on the Great Lakes to test out their autonomous underwater vehicle that can conduct image surveys. This image data would then be post-processed with various neural networks to detect and record the numbers of fish and mussels of certain species. This system would then be used to determine the populations of these species across the great lakes.
Photo by Robert Coelius
Multimedia Producer
Communications & Marketing, Michigan Engineering
@UMengineering
Valeriy Ivanov, CEE Associate Professor, works to install sensors in the Amazon Rainforest outside of Santarém, Brazil on October 30, 2018.
Ivanov aims to collect water flow data from the trees to build a model that will help us gain an understanding of our push and pull on the region, and how it potentially affects the world’s climate.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Gideon Billings, Robotics Ph.D. Student and Nick Goumas, Research & Development Engineer with the DROP Lab (droplab.engin.umich.edu) pack up their autonomous underwater vehicle that can conduct image surveys. This image data would then be post-processed with various neural networks to detect and record the numbers of fish and mussels of certain species. This system would then be used to determine the populations of these species across the great lakes.
Photo by Robert Coelius
Multimedia Producer
Communications & Marketing, Michigan Engineering
@UMengineering
USGS and members of the DROP Lab (droplab.engin.umich.edu) embark on the Great Lakes to test out their autonomous underwater vehicle that can conduct image surveys. This image data would then be post-processed with various neural networks to detect and record the numbers of fish and mussels of certain species. This system would then be used to determine the populations of these species across the great lakes.
Photo by Robert Coelius
Multimedia Producer
Communications & Marketing, Michigan Engineering
@UMengineering
Jeanne Murabito, Executive Director for Student Affairs, speaks at the cultureXchange: Celebrating diversity through shared experience on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on November 8, 2017.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
PhD Student Matthew Bernhard (center) along Victor Ongkowijaya and Stephen Nurushev, both Undergrads in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, work on extracting data from used voting machines acquired through Ebay One of the machines that the students broke down found voting record data dating from 2004–2014. These machines are still widely used in Louisiana and South Carolina.
A new special topics course on election security taught by CSE Professor J. Alex Haldermand and Bernhard provides students with a deep examination of the past, present, and future of US elections, informed by perspectives from computer security, tech policy, human factors, and more.
Photo by Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications and marketing
Social Justice and Equity in Education, a weeklong course designed for education professionals, diversity specialists, guidance counselors, social workers, and more, took place June 19–23 at Penn State York. Penn State York’s Summer Institute 2017 featured Laura Roy, associate professor of literacy education at Penn State Harrisburg, and addressed the difficult subject of social justice in the classroom.
CEE Graduate Student Research Assistant Gaang Lee (right) applies wearable technologies such as IMU sensors and biosensors to identify fall risk, physical fatigue and heat stress at the Alexander G. Ruthven construction site in Ann Arbor, MI. on September 19, 2019.
This pilot study, run by CEE Professor SangHyun Lee, explores how wearable technologies can be applied to identify important risks, thereby preventing a potential accident.
Photo: Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Melina Bautista, CEE Research Fellow, collects water samples from the Ann Arbor Water Treatment Plant in Ann Arbor, MI on January 17, 2019.
Bautista collects the samples to determine the effectiveness of water filters that CEE Professor Lutgarde Raskin group works on.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Photographer, University of Michigan - College of Engineering
Sarah Mayfield, right, and advisor Renee Threlfall, evaluate wine for aroma, color, taste and other characteristics. Wine grapes require ongoing evaluation to determine their consistency during storage and over time Threlfall worked with fruit breeder John Clark to develop four wine grapes from the Division of Agriculture fruit breeding program. (U of A System Division of Agriculture file photo by Fred Miller)
Juan Lopez, MSE Post-Doc, holds a FeBi2Se4 selenide in the H.H. Dow Building on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on June 21, 2019.
Lopez and members of Associate Professor of Materials Science and Engineering Pierre Ferdinand Poudeu-Poudeu's group, engineer magnetic transitions in ferromagnetic semiconductors through chemical manipulation of spatial separation between magnetic centers.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Valeriy Ivanov, CEE Associate Professor, works to install sensors in the Amazon Rainforest outside of Santarém, Brazil on October 28, 2018.
Ivanov aims to collect water flow data from the trees to build a model that will help us gain an understanding of our push and pull on the region, and how it potentially affects the world’s climate.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Valeriy Ivanov, CEE Associate Professor, works to install sensors in the Amazon Rainforest outside of Santarém, Brazil on November 1, 2018.
Ivanov aims to collect water flow data from the trees to build a model that will help us gain an understanding of our push and pull on the region, and how it potentially affects the world’s climate.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications and 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
Abraham Lamesgin Addisie, Graduate Student Research Assistant in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, discusses his research on heterogeneous memory subsystems for natural graph analytics for the Richard and Eleanor Towner Prize for Outstanding Ph.D. Research at the 2018 Engineering Graduate Symposium in the Duderstadt Gallery on North Campus in Ann Arbor, MI. on Friday October 26, 2018.
With over 400 participants, alumni, and visiting students from around the world, the 13th annual Engineering Graduate Symposium brings research, networking and recruitment to North Campus.
Photo by Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Alexander Hill, a Chemical Engineering Graduate Student Instructor, monitors a new reactor designed to produce ammonia for fertilizer without relying on fossil fuels.
U-M’s team is pioneering a system that harnesses energy from sunlight, reducing the reliance on temperature and pressure to bring the hydrogen and nitrogen together. It will pull nitrogen from the air using an air separation unit while splitting water molecules to produce hydrogen. Those gases will then be compressed inside the reactor to create ammonia at significantly lower temperatures and pressures than traditional methods. Each step in U-M’s process is driven by solar power, through both electricity-generating panels as well as new catalysts that help fuel chemical reactions with light, known as photocatalysts.
Photo: Robert Coelius/University of Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Quyen Melina Bautista de los Santos, Research Fellow with Civil and Environmental Engineering, speaks at the 2019 Sustainability and Development Conference inside the Samuel T. Dana Building on Central Campus in Ann Arbor, MI. on Monday, October 14, 2019.
The four day event focused on themes such as sustainable development with indigenous peoples as well as water, sanitation, and health.
Bautista de los Santos joined four other speakers at a session dedicated to talking about challenges and opportunities for collaboration across research and professional sectors toward sustainable clean water supplies. Her talk focused on contrasting water quality in intermittent vs. continuous water supply.
Photo: Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Colorado State University's College of Health and Human Sciences celebrates its graduates at the Spring 2022 Commencement. May 15, 2022
Colorado State University's College of Health and Human Sciences celebrates its graduates at the Spring 2022 Commencement. May 15, 2022
Valeriy Ivanov, CEE Associate Professor, brings out some leftover fish from previous night’s dinner at a basecamp in the Amazon Rainforest outside of Santarém, Brazil on October 27, 2018.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Brian Ellis, Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and Anne Menefee, Environmental Engineering PhD Student, work in the EWRE Building on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on December 5, 2018.
Ellis and Menefee are injecting CO2-acidified brines through rocks under high temperature and pressure for the purpose of carbon sequestration.
Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing
Necmiye Ozay, an assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer science talks to Lars Petter Nilsson, EECES Graduate Student Research Assistant, and her group testing their software at Mcity - U-M's model town for autonomous vehicles. Unlike most driverless cars, which are programmed by humans, Ozay's method uses a form of artificial intelligence. Given the vehicle specs, the rules of the road, and the laws of physics, their algorithm can program the car to drive safely.
Photo by Robert Coelius
Multimedia Producer
Communications and Marketing
College of Engineering
@UMengineering