2022
- After nearly three decades serving the College of Engineering and Applied Science, Professor Jana Milford is set to retire August 2022. Milford has held many titles during her distinguished career 鈥 from Department of Mechanical Engineering Chair and the first director of the Environmental Engineering Program, to founding faculty advisor for the Engineering GoldShirt Program.
- Nine months after retiring, Professor Emeritus Yung-Cheng 鈥淵.C.鈥 Lee continues to spearhead technology breakthroughs. As the founder, president and CEO of Kelvin Thermal Technologies, Lee has pioneered the thinnest and most flexible cooling solution for smartphones, tablets, laptops, augmented reality, data center, electrical vehicles and micro satellites.
- Anyone who has spent time in the Idea Forge has come to know Shirley Chessman. After working as the Idea Forge Mechanical Lab Engineer for the past seven years, Chessman is retiring this summer.
- As a Senior Mechanical Engineer with NREL, alumna Alicen Kandt鈥檚 goal is to inspire people to embrace more resilient and sustainable energy options. She earned her master鈥檚 degree from the Department of Mechanical Engineering in 2004.
- The slide deck is part of presentations given by IRT directors in April on accomplishments and activity within their themes to date. They include details on funding results, important research findings and other lessons learned from the initiative.
- A group of mechanical engineering students at the College of Engineering and Applied Science designed and built the prototype with Lockheed Martin for their Senior Design project.
- Josh Miller, a mechanical engineering student, is the first to enroll in the ITLP Arduino micro-credential - a programs that aims to serve students looking to improve their proficiency with Arduino microcontrollers.
- Ahmed Ashmaig (MechEngr'23), the president of 兔子先生传媒文化作品's chapter of the National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE), has received the university's Ripple Award. The award is given by the 兔子先生传媒文化作品's Center for Inclusion and Social Change in collaboration with the Dennis Small Cultural Center.
- The air quality study, led by mechanical engineering PhD candidate Aniya Khalili, aims to inspire the community to lead cleaner lifestyles and promote further research on pesticide exposure.
- Students learn how solid and fluid mechanics play a role in how cancer cells interact and form solid tumors. Taught by Professor Maureen Lynch, the class examines the experimental systems and technical evaluations of the disease to model and test cancer-related processes.