Shen receives prestigious Chinese Canadian award
Xuemin (Sherman) Shen, an electrical and computer engineering professor, has been recognized with the 2019 Award of Merit from the Federation of Chinese Professionals Ontario (
Xuemin (Sherman) Shen, an electrical and computer engineering professor, has been recognized with the 2019 Award of Merit from the Federation of Chinese Professionals Ontario (
Work on research problems related to the future of wireless networks is the focus of a new partnership between À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ Engineering researchers and .
Michael Pope doesn’t know how much daily battery life people would be willing to trade away for the convenience of smartphones that fully charge in a matter of just five or 10 seconds.
But after using nanotechnology for a recent breakthrough in the design of energy-storage devices known as supercapacitors, the À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ Engineering professor expects that question to become increasingly relevant in the case of cellphones, laptops and a wide range of other potential uses.
In one corner of ’s lab, a laser beam is strategically aimed to disrupt circuit board operations. Nearby, electromagnetic pulses bombard an uncapped chip while a couple of graduate students track the results on an oscilloscope screen.
By probing for vulnerabilities that hackers could exploit, her team at the University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµâ€™s Faculty of Engineering is making the Internet of Things more secure.
From a distance, it’s just possible to believe that University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµÂ engineering professor Safieddin (Ali) Safavi-Naeini, who currently occupies the NSERC/ BlackBerry Industrial Research Chair in wireless communication, has a dull, dry and theoretical job in academia.
When people started putting mannequins in the backs of their cars to try and sneak onto  during the Pan Am Games in Toronto, it was an extreme example of how desperate we can become when faced with major traffic congestion. It was also proof that  potential solution to transportation management couldn’t come at a better time.