News

News

February 6, 2023

Arvind Raman selected as next Dean of Engineering

Longtime Purdue University administrator, faculty member and Boilermaker alumnus Arvind Raman is the new John A. Edwardson Dean of the College of Engineering. Raman, currently Purdue’s executive associate dean of engineering and the Robert V. Adams Professor in Mechanical Engineering, takes office April 1.
February 2, 2023

Jong Hyun Choi wins award to study in Germany

Jong Hyun Choi, professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue University, has been selected to receive a Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel Research Award from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. Choi will spend several months in Germany, researching DNA engineering.
February 1, 2023

How does zero gravity affect boiling and condensation?

With temperatures on the moon ranging from minus 410 to a scorching 250 degrees Fahrenheit, it’s an understatement to say that humans will need habitats with heat and air conditioning to survive there long term. Issam Mudawar has spent 11 years collaborating with NASA Glenn Research Center on an experiment for the International Space Station, to understand what reduced gravity does to boiling and condensation.
January 30, 2023

A new way to identify stresses in complex fluids

Fluid dynamics researchers use many techniques to study turbulent flows like ocean currents, or the swirling atmosphere of other planets. Arezoo Adrekani's team has discovered that a mathematical construct used in these fields provides valuable information about stress in complex flow geometries.
January 26, 2023

Robots get their sea legs

Robots do a pretty good job walking on solid surfaces. But what if they are needed on a boat, train, aircraft, escalator, or other moving surface? Yan Gu is pioneering the control systems that enable robots to traverse both static and dynamic environments.
January 24, 2023

Purdue ME is the #1 Online Master's program in the country

For the fourth straight year, Purdue ME's Online Master's program is ranked #1 in the country, according to US News and World Report. Purdue ME's Online Master's offers the same degree with the same faculty, for less than $25,000.
January 20, 2023

Making semiconductors dense and cool

Packing more transistors into a microchip is like packing more people in an elevator – it's physically possible, but it gets too warm and uncomfortable very quickly. Tiwei Wei is proposing a solution: building jets of coolant directly into the microchip itself.
January 19, 2023

Using cancer cells as logic gates to determine what makes them move

Cancer cells migrate through the body for multiple reasons; some are simply following the flow of a fluid, while others are actively following specific chemical trails. So how do you determine which cells are moving and why? Purdue University researchers have reverse-engineered a cellular signal processing system and used it like a logic gate – a simple computer – to better understand what causes specific cells to migrate.
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