News

News

March 22, 2021

My parents met in Prof. Krousgrill's class 30 years ago!

When sophomore Emily Lothamer took a Basic Mechanics class with Prof. Chuck Krousgrill in 2020, she didn't realize she'd also be getting a history lesson! Her parents, both Purdue ME grads, first met in Prof. Krousgrill's class nearly 30 years ago.
March 17, 2021

Summer Projects are back!

Is it still tough to find an internship or co-op because of COVID? Join an ME Summer Project Team! Join a virtual team of 2-6 students, and work with a faculty or staff mentor on real-world engineering projects. Earn a $1,000 stipend at the completion of the project!
March 16, 2021

Ride the wave: soliton resonance may enable mechanical energy harvesting

Energy harvesting – creating electrical energy from cars driving over a road, or people walking on a bridge – has long been theorized as a potential source of sustainable electricity. But due to the physical properties of those vibrations, implementing the process has been largely infeasible. Now, a Purdue researcher has proposed using metamaterials as physical frequency converters, potentially bringing us a step closer to harvesting the energy of those vibrations.
March 10, 2021

Joe D. Hoffman (1934-2021)

Joe D. Hoffman, who taught at Purdue Mechanical Engineering for 38 years and directed the Maurice J. Zucrow Laboratories, passed away on February 13, 2021.
March 9, 2021

Steve Son elected fellow of Combustion Institute

Steven F. Son, the Alfred J. McAllister Professor of Mechanical Engineering, has been elected as a 2021 Fellow of the Combustion Institute, "for leading experimental studies of the combustion and decomposition processes in condensed phase and novel energetic materials."
March 4, 2021

Rewriting the book on the fluid mechanics of blood vessels

Blood vessels are a unique subject in fluid mechanics because their elastic structure affects the flow, while the flow also affects the structure. Prof. Ivan Christov has been able to distill this complex relationship into a single mathematical expression.
March 1, 2021

Aaron Comis: Parachute Engineer

While sending humans into space is impressive, bringing them back safely to earth is the true accomplishment. And all crewed space capsules return the same way: by parachute. Aaron Comis is a NASA parachute engineer who works with Boeing and SpaceX to bring those astronauts home safely.
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