News

News

March 6, 2020

Collapsible basket accelerates biomedical testing

Of all the advances in biomedical testing, leave it to a mechanical engineer to focus on making the tray easier to use. This collapsible tray, developed by Thomas Siegmund, enables tissue samples to be tested much faster.
March 5, 2020

Making better wind turbines with hydraulics

The mechanical gearbox in a typical wind turbine makes it top-heavy, expensive, and difficult to repair, especially if the turbine is offshore. By replacing the gearbox with hydraulic transmission, offshore wind turbines could generate electricity at up to 19% lower cost.
March 3, 2020

Finite Element Analysis of Stick Bombs

Popsicle stick bombs are chain reactions made from interweaving popsicle sticks in a specific pattern. A staple of YouTube videos and children's science classes, they demonstrate the basics of kinetic energy. But there are complex physics behind those cascading sticks, and thanks to award-winning research from an undergraduate student at Purdue, we know a lot more about them.
March 2, 2020

Zucrow Labs Annual Report

It's been (pardon the pun) an explosive year at the largest academic propulsion lab in the world, Zucrow Labs. Read all about it in our annual report.
February 28, 2020

Turbomachine expander offers efficient and safe heating and cooling

PhD student Riley Barta has developed a turbomachine expander that helps harvest previously wasted energy used in the process of moving air from high to low pressure. The device can be used as a control agent within existing heat pumps. Purdue is world-renowned in research of refrigeration and compressors.
February 27, 2020

Sticktronics: Sometimes it's good to be thin-skinned

Smart thin films are just like stickers, but with embedded high-performance electronics and sensors that sense chemical changes, temperature, humidity, or harness solar energy. Chi Hwan Lee explains how sticktronics can turn any object into a smart object in the Internet-of-things.
February 24, 2020

Why coronavirus spread so fast on a cruise ship

Prof. Yan Chen studies how airborne viruses spread in enclosed environments like airplanes and cruise ships. Keeping coronavirus patients on board a cruise ship is the worst thing they could have done, because a cruise ship's HVAC system can't filter out the virus, and may end up spreading it even more.
February 21, 2020

Michael Kelly and Scott Tingle honored as Distinguished Engineering Alumni

Two ME grads, both key in the space program, have been honored as Distinguished Engineering Alumni by Purdue University. Michael Kelly (BSME '78, MSME '83) served with the FAA's Office of Commercial Space Transportation, and Scott Tingle (MSME '88) served as a NASA astronaut, spending 168 days on the International Space Station.
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