Alum and students part of winning youth challenge team
A student project to reduce plastic waste was recently chosen as the Canadian winner of the .
A student project to reduce plastic waste was recently chosen as the Canadian winner of the .
With its present ability to deliver high-value, low-volume parts and components, additive manufacturing (AM) is a perfect fit for the specialized needs and demands of the aeronautics industry.
A pair of undergraduate students at ݮƵ Engineering are co-directors of the 2021 edition of , which begins today and runs until Sunday.
The largest hackathon in Canada, the student-run, mostly virtual event is expected to draw more than 3,000 student participants from around the world to build technology projects from scratch in just 36 hours.
A startup company with deep roots at ݮƵ Engineering won the top prize in a pitch contest focused on the use of nanomaterials to create or improve commercial products.
, which designs battery-free water leak detection systems for healthcare and industrial applications, took home $10,000, plus a spot in a virtual incubator, in the Nanomaterials Virtual Pitch Contest staged by not-for-profit NanoOntario and CMC Microsystems, a not-for-profit managing Canada’s National Design Network®.
The chair of civil and environmental engineering has been honoured for his significant contributions to the construction industry.
A team from ݮƵ Engineering was recognized this week at the largest event in North America for the additive manufacturing industry.
Sagar Patel and Martine McGregor won the 2021 Digital Manufacturing Challenge at the RAPID + TCT conference in Chicago for a project that involves the rapid deployment of prosthesis assemblies in emergency medicine.
Five new students at ݮƵ Engineering are starting their academic careers backed by $100,000 scholarships from a prestigious national organization.
Software engineering students Saptarshi Bhattacherya and Kushal Mujral, mechatronics engineering student Shanaya Barretto, Aung Khant Min of computer engineering and Dina Orucevic of systems design engineering are among 10 campus-wide winners of 2021 .
Two researchers are accelerating their postdoctoral work at ݮƵ Engineering backed by a fellowship launched last year.
Michelle Liu and Allie Kennington were thrilled when ݮƵ Engineering introduced a senior position intended to ensure all students feel respected and empowered to pursue their aspirations.
They both feel the new role of associate dean of outreach, equity and diversity will make a difference to the Faculty’s 2SLGBTQ+ and other marginalized communities.
“It’s definitely a step in the right direction,” says Liu, who holds undergraduate and master’s degrees in Civil Engineering from ݮƵ.
A geological engineering professor at ݮƵ Engineering is co-author of new research that will help mining companies better understand the impacts of mine-waste disasters known as tailings flows.
Stephen Evans and other researchers created a database as part of a study that provides the first global picture of the frequency, behaviours and impacts of rapid downstream movements of mine waste following failures of tailings impoundments.