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  • Vanderbilt graduate students address legislators to advocate for NSF funding

    Vanderbilt graduate students address legislators to advocate for NSF funding

    Two graduate students from Vanderbilt’s School of Engineering and one from the School of Medicine Basic Sciences recently addressed legislators in Washington, D.C., virtually, sharing stories about the important role funding from the National Science Foundation has played in their research and training. Read More

    Jun 30, 2021

  • $2.5 million NASA project will develop and test safety management for ‘air taxis’

    $2.5 million NASA project will develop and test safety management for ‘air taxis’

    Multi-university team tackles safety systems for autonomous eVTOLs Vanderbilt engineers are part of a NASA-funded, multi-institution effort to develop safety systems for a mode of transportation that doesn’t exist yet—small, commercial, autonomous planes that move people by air between locations in large, crowded cities. The task is a formidable one with machine learning at its... Read More

    Jun 28, 2021

  • $2.5 million NASA project will develop and test safety management for ‘air taxis’

    $2.5 million NASA project will develop and test safety management for ‘air taxis’

    Multi-university team tackles safety systems for autonomous eVTOLs Vanderbilt engineers are part of a NASA-funded, multi-institution effort to develop safety systems for a mode of transportation that doesn’t exist yet—small, commercial, autonomous planes that move people by air between locations in large, crowded cities. The task is a formidable one with machine learning at its... Read More

    Jun 28, 2021

  • Grad student adds drone imagery to toolbox for post-disaster recovery

    Grad student adds drone imagery to toolbox for post-disaster recovery

      A new online gallery of photos taken in the days, weeks and months following the March 2020 regional tornados is the work of an engineering graduate student who wants to make disaster recovery more equitable. Daniel Perrucci, a Ph.D. candidate in civil engineering, used bird’s eye imagery from drones as well as street-level photography... Read More

    Jun 24, 2021

  • Engineering grad student co-leads effort to repurpose approved medications

    Engineering grad student co-leads effort to repurpose approved medications

    Global repositioning campaign targets needs of children and pregnant women Anup Challa, BE ’21, MS ’21, has been tapped to co-lead a team of researchers and patient advocates to identify areas across the world in need of health care for pregnant women and infants. He is the new chair of the Special Populations Coordinating Committee... Read More

    Jun 14, 2021

  • Engineering grad student co-leads effort to repurpose approved medications

    Engineering grad student co-leads effort to repurpose approved medications

    Global repositioning campaign targets needs of children and pregnant women Anup Challa, BE ’21, MS ’21, has been tapped to co-lead a team of researchers and patient advocates to identify areas across the world in need of health care for pregnant women and infants. He is the new chair of the Special Populations Coordinating Committee... Read More

    Jun 14, 2021

  • Gore tapped for prestigious lecture named for MRI co-inventor Lauterbur

    Gore tapped for prestigious lecture named for MRI co-inventor Lauterbur

    The relatively brief history of medical MRI is riddled with failed predictions, according to University Professor John Gore, founding director of the Vanderbilt University Institute of Imaging Science. Bold statements about the optimal magnetic field and the limits of magnet strength were way off. In 1982 one researcher concluded MRI was useful for imaging the... Read More

    Jun 1, 2021

  • Gore tapped for prestigious lecture named for MRI co-inventor Lauterbur

    Gore tapped for prestigious lecture named for MRI co-inventor Lauterbur

    The relatively brief history of medical MRI is riddled with failed predictions, according to University Professor John Gore, founding director of the Vanderbilt University Institute of Imaging Science. Bold statements about the optimal magnetic field and the limits of magnet strength were way off. In 1982 one researcher concluded MRI was useful for imaging the... Read More

    Jun 1, 2021

  • Work named 2021 Chancellor Faculty Fellow

    Work named 2021 Chancellor Faculty Fellow

    Daniel Work, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering, has been named a Chancellor Faculty Fellow. He is one of nine highly accomplished, recently tenured faculty in the 2021 Chancellor Faculty Fellow cohort, which will meet as a group during their two-year fellowships to exchange ideas on teaching and research and engage in academic leadership... Read More

    May 12, 2021

  • Work named 2021 Chancellor Faculty Fellow

    Work named 2021 Chancellor Faculty Fellow

    Daniel Work, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering, has been named a Chancellor Faculty Fellow. He is one of nine highly accomplished, recently tenured faculty in the 2021 Chancellor Faculty Fellow cohort, which will meet as a group during their two-year fellowships to exchange ideas on teaching and research and engage in academic leadership... Read More

    May 12, 2021

  • Work named 2021 Chancellor Faculty Fellow

    Work named 2021 Chancellor Faculty Fellow

    Daniel Work, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering, has been named a Chancellor Faculty Fellow. He is one of nine highly accomplished, recently tenured faculty in the 2021 Chancellor Faculty Fellow cohort, which will meet as a group during their two-year fellowships to exchange ideas on teaching and research and engage in academic leadership... Read More

    May 12, 2021

  • Soldier-Inspired Innovation Incubator team advances to finals for $500,000 xTechBOLT prize

    Soldier-Inspired Innovation Incubator team advances to finals for $500,000 xTechBOLT prize

    By Jenna Somers During battle, many soldiers who become wounded find themselves at the mercy of another soldier’s medical training, hoping beyond hope that the soldier administering aid will remember their training well enough to save the wounded soldier’s life. Under such duress, recalling the details of medical training could be difficult, and the failure... Read More

    May 7, 2021

  • Soldier-Inspired Innovation Incubator team advances to finals for $500,000 xTechBOLT prize

    Soldier-Inspired Innovation Incubator team advances to finals for $500,000 xTechBOLT prize

    By Jenna Somers During battle, many soldiers who become wounded find themselves at the mercy of another soldier’s medical training, hoping beyond hope that the soldier administering aid will remember their training well enough to save the wounded soldier’s life. Under such duress, recalling the details of medical training could be difficult, and the failure... Read More

    May 7, 2021

  • Vanderbilt graduate researcher awarded prestigious $161,000 U.S. Department of Energy grant

    Vanderbilt graduate researcher awarded prestigious $161,000 U.S. Department of Energy grant

    Irfan Ibrahim The U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Nuclear Energy has awarded an Integrated University Program fellowship grant of $161,000 to environmental engineering graduate research assistant Irfan Ibrahim to further his work on nuclear reactor safety. The office’s awards provide 50 scholarships and 31 fellowships for nuclear scientists and engineers at 35 colleges and... Read More

    May 5, 2021

  • Vanderbilt graduate researcher awarded prestigious $161,000 U.S. Department of Energy grant

    Vanderbilt graduate researcher awarded prestigious $161,000 U.S. Department of Energy grant

    Irfan Ibrahim The U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Nuclear Energy has awarded an Integrated University Program fellowship grant of $161,000 to environmental engineering graduate research assistant Irfan Ibrahim to further his work on nuclear reactor safety. The office’s awards provide 50 scholarships and 31 fellowships for nuclear scientists and engineers at 35 colleges and... Read More

    May 5, 2021

  • Engineers’ groundbreaking discovery points to a new route to create thermal superconductors

    Engineers’ groundbreaking discovery points to a new route to create thermal superconductors

    The relentless increase in heat loads imposed on devices in modern technologies is driving renewed interest among engineers and materials scientists in the area of heat transfer. A key challenge is finding approaches to enhance the materials’ capability of conducting heat. A team of engineers led by Vanderbilt mechanical engineering Professor Deyu Li and his... Read More

    Apr 16, 2021

  • Engineers’ groundbreaking discovery points to a new route to create thermal superconductors

    Engineers’ groundbreaking discovery points to a new route to create thermal superconductors

    The relentless increase in heat loads imposed on devices in modern technologies is driving renewed interest among engineers and materials scientists in the area of heat transfer. A key challenge is finding approaches to enhance the materials’ capability of conducting heat. A team of engineers led by Vanderbilt mechanical engineering Professor Deyu Li and his... Read More

    Apr 16, 2021

  • Student-developed machine-learning techniques make surgeries safer, easier to review

    Student-developed machine-learning techniques make surgeries safer, easier to review

    An interdisciplinary fellowship with the Data Science Institute has resulted in a promising machine-learning technology that can effectively track complex surgical activity, thus having the potential to improve patient outcomes, safety and documentation. Read More

    Apr 12, 2021

  • Research Snapshot: New microscopy technique unveils feature that can shape applications of a class of quantum materials

    Research Snapshot: New microscopy technique unveils feature that can shape applications of a class of quantum materials

    THE IDEA A team of researchers led by Oak Ridge National Laboratory microscopist Miaofang Chi and Vanderbilt theoretical physicist Sokrates Pantelides has used a new Scanning Transmission Electron Microscope technique to image the electron distribution in ionic compounds known as electrides— especially the electrons that float loosely within pockets and appear separate from the atomic... Read More

    Apr 8, 2021

  • A drop of rubbing alcohol and office laminator provides a manufacturability boost for single atom thick membranes

    A drop of rubbing alcohol and office laminator provides a manufacturability boost for single atom thick membranes

    Vanderbilt engineers used  a drop of rubbing alcohol, an office laminator and creativity to develop scalable processes for manufacturing single atom thin membranes. Their membranes outperformed state-of-the-art dialysis commercial membranes and the approach is fully compatible with roll-to-roll manufacturing. Details of the imaginative experiment are recently published in the journal of the Royal Chemistry Society:... Read More

    Mar 5, 2021