2664 Results
1

Conversion process turns pollution into cash

March 17, 2022

Engineers at the University of Cincinnati have developed a promising electrochemical system to convert emissions from chemical and power plants into useful products while addressing climate change.

3

Engineering students on front line to produce electric vehicles

March 9, 2022

Three University of Cincinnati engineering students got a chance to see and participate in what could be the wave of the future as part of a four-month co-op experience with Rivian Automotive, an Irvine, California-based electric vehicle automaker.

6

What computers tell us about synthetic biology

March 3, 2022

Creating synthetic life could be easily within our grasp soon based on a comparison with the evolution of computer chips. Computer programming and gene synthesis appear to share little in common. But according to University of Cincinnati professor Andrew Steckl, an Ohio Eminent Scholar, leaps forward in technology in the former make him optimistic that wide scale gene manufacture is achievable.

7

Alumnus honored for building Black Achievers professional network

March 1, 2022

Michael Moore, a University of Cincinnati mechanical engineering alumnus, was featured by the Cincinnati USA Regional Chamber in its Making Black History celebration honoring seven Black leaders living, working and building legacies in the region. Moore is the founder, CEO and president of Black Achievers, a nonprofit, professional networking organization with more than 4,000 members in Cincinnati and 30,000 nationwide.

8

CVG and UC put AI to work to shorten airport lines

February 25, 2022

UC College of Engineering and Applied Science doctoral student Javier Viaña used airport technology that identifies the number of people entering the terminals to build a custom algorithm that can help the airport predict surges of travelers in 15-minute increments. The goal is to help the airport anticipate crowding to reduce long waits.

9

UC engineering professor honored for energy process expertise

February 24, 2022

Raj Manglik, a University of Cincinnati professor of mechanical engineering, was awarded the Donald Q. Kern Award from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers for contributions in the fields of heat transfer, transport phenomena and energy processes. Manglik’s career includes significant research contributions in thermal science and engineering, including an ongoing Department of Energy-supported project to eliminate water-cooled power production and replace it with his patented air-cooled system.