bu me annual report 2008-2009
Post on 24-Mar-2016
219 Views
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
An Report 2008-2009D
Department Administration and Committees3
Highlights6
Faculty Awards13
Faculty16
Adjunct, Research, Visiting and Associated Faculty19
Staff20
New Faculty and Staff20
Enrollment 22
Degrees Awarded23
Courses Offered24
Objectives and Outcomes 26
Student Awards27
Student Organizations28
Senior Design Projects31
Recruitment36
Enrollment by Program37
Teaching Fellows and Research Assistants38
Graduate Student Awards38
Degrees Awarded40
College of Engineering
Annual Report 2008-2009
Mechanical Engineering Department
2 www.bu.edu/me/
C O N T E N T S
MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR
OVERVIEW2 Highlights5 Faculty Awards
FACULTY AND STAFF7 Faculty10 New Faculty and Staff11 Adjunct, Research, Visiting and Associated Faculty11 Staff
UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS13 Objectives and Outcomes14 Enrollment14 Degrees Awarded15 Courses Offered17 Student Awards18 Student Organizations21 Senior Design Projects
GRADUATE PROGRAMS25 Recruitment26 Enrollment by Program27 Graduate Student Awards28 Degrees Awarded29 Courses Offered30 MS Theses and PhD Dissertations31 Distance Learning
RESEARCH33 Research Funding40 Faculty Publications55 Research Laboratories60 Affiliated Research Centers62 Seminars64 Merril L. Ebner Fund
I am pleased to share with you the 2008-2009 edition of the Bos-ton University Dept. of Mechanical Engineering Annual Report. It has been a year of significant growth and change, starting with the July 2008 merger of the BU Manufacturing Engineering and Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering departments, a union that resulted in a single, unified department of Mechanical Engineering, boasting over 40 full time faculty dedicated to quality undergraduate and graduate instruction and active in a multiplicity of research topics. ME faculty have secondary appointments in other departments and are partici-pating faculty in the newly established Divisions of Material Science and Engineering and Systems Engineering. Add to the mix approxi-mately $12M in new extramural research funding and you have a rich tapestry of applied and basic research activity that cuts across disci-plines and offers enhanced breadth and depth of opportunity to our students. Current areas of strength include acoustics and vibrations, automated manufacturing, biomaterials and biomedical applications of mechanical engineering, thermo-fluid sciences, materials engi-neering and mechanics, MEMS & NEMS, nanobiotechnology, robotics & controls, photonics, and systems engineering.
For students who matriculated as of September 2008, we offer ac-credited BS degrees in mechanical (ME), aerospace (AE), and manu-facturing engineering (MFG). However, the Department has since initiated a 4-year process by which we will discontinue our BS degree programs in AE and MFG and replace them with an accredited degree in mechanical engineering coupled with optional concentrations in aerospace and manufacturing. This will provide students with the best of both worlds: a solid foundational degree in the highly market-able and intellectually mobile discipline of mechanical engineering, coupled to optional, specialized education in either AE or MFG. The new program is designed with flexibility in mind, and we have since introduced additional concentrations in the emerging areas of energy and environmental engineering and nanotechnology.
At the graduate level, the department offers the PhD in ME as well as MS degrees in both ME and MFG. Both thesis and non-thesis op-tions are available, and interested students can choose to pursue the MS in manufacturing via distance learning, as part of an international partnership with a consortium of German institutions, or even as a dual MS/MBA degree offered jointly with the School of Management. This programmatic diversity is a direct consequence of the merger, and positions the ME department to respond to new challenges and opportunities in both education and research.
During the 2008-2009 academic year we made new additions to the ranks of ME faculty at both the adjunct and tenure track level. Ad-junct Professor James Lynch, a world expert in underwater acoustics, joins us from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute. Assistant Professor Lorena Barba specializes in the computational modeling of fluid flow, specifically the use of “particle methods” in modeling and the pursuit of fast and efficient algorithms. Lorena received her PhD in aeronautics in 2004 from the California Institute of Technology and joined BU by way of the University of Bristol (UK).
A number of ME faculty members received well-deserved awards. New Society Fellows include John Baillieul (SIAM), R. Glynn Holt (ASA) and Victor Yakhot (APS). Allan Pierce received the Gold Medal of the Acoustical Foundation of India, Tom Bifano received the prestigious Bepi Columbo prize for his work with micro-deformable mirrors, and James Lynch received the Walter Monk Award for his contributions to underwater acoustics. Several faculty received College of Engi-neering research and service awards, and the department benefitted from a number of young faculty and foundation awards.
In 2008-2009, the ME department featured a total undergraduate en-rollment of 482 and conferred about 95 bachelor of science degrees. The graduate program boasts approximately 100 MS/PhD students enrolled and 35 degrees conferred. It is important to stress that the ME faculty research portfolio is extremely diverse and crosscutting. ME professors serve as principal investigator on grants administered by numerous College departments and research centers, as well as the BU Medical Center. Indeed, almost 50% of the PhD students sup-ported by ME faculty are earning degrees in programs outside of me-chanical engineering, such as BME, ECE, or one of the Divisions.
It is both an honor and a challenge to lead the new BU Department of Mechanical Engineering into the future. The next few years will wit-ness exciting changes in our research portfolio, faculty demographics, and degree programs. I invite you to peruse the Report and learn more about the depth and breadth of our programs, the spectrum of student activities, profiles of award-winning faculty, research inter-ests, and facilities.
Ronald A. RoyProfessor and ChairDepartment of Mechanical Engineering
MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR
Ronald A. Roy
2 www.bu.edu/me/
O V E R V I E WHighlightsFiscal Year 2009 was a banner year for the “new” Department of Mechanical Engineering – the result of a merger of the Depart-ments of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering (AME) and Manufacturing Engineering (MFG). In this year of profound change, the list of activities and accomplishments is too long to address in detail. Rather than launch into a lengthy narrative, we instead provide an “itemized” summary of ME activities in a number of areas, some of which are expanded upon in other sections of this Report.
P R O G R A M M A T I C H I G H L I G H T S
o On July 1, 2008, we formally merged the AME and MFG Departments and initiated the multi-year process of both expanding the BS program in mechanical engineering and sun-setting the aerospace engineering and manufac-turing programs. (We are retaining the Manufacturing MS program and the associated Distance Learning com-ponent.) The merger effectively doubled the size of the department and substantially enhanced the scope of our research portfolio.
o We created two new Concentrations to supplement our BSME program (see pages 3-4).
o The ME front office staff, headed by Director James Lan-gell, was expanded to include a number of new positions and infused with fresh talent. In addition to the usual staff positions, we have now added dedicated positions that focus on financial administration, undergraduate program coordination, and communications coordination.
o We established a leadership structure that includes 4 new and dedicated Associate Chairs for the various academic programs.
o We established a formal mentoring program for the junior faculty.
o We adopted annual meetings with all of our undergradu-ate classes.
o We became fully integrated (faculty-wise) with both new Divisions, perhaps more so than any other Department within the College.
o We had an extremely successful faculty recruiting season (see page 10).
E V E N T S
ME Faculty Retreat
The Department held its inaugural Retreat in January of 2009. In-tended to serve a vehicle for getting to know each other, we dis-cussed several matters ranging from our evolving research portfolio to faculty recruitment to academic program planning and evolution. (January 30, 2009)
Senior Project Day
Senior Project Day is a forum for Mechanical, Aerospace, and Manu-facturing Engineering seniors to present their Capstone projects. With three active programs presenting in multiple rooms, we were treated to a full slate of presentations covering a broad range of top-ics. (May 1, 2009)
Mechanical Engineering Open House
Our annual Open House featured a blend of informational tables, technical demonstrations, poster presentations on undergraduate and graduate research, and exceptional baked goods from the kitch-ens of several faculty and staff. (November 21, 2008)
Manufacturing Engineering Industrial Advisory Board
At this meeting the IAB members pitched senior project ideas to MFG seniors. (November 21, 2008)
ME/AE/MFG Design Summit
We invited alumni and industry representatives to join us to listen to our best student Capstone presentations from the three undergradu-ate programs and to offer feedback on proposed changes to the over-all design curriculum. (May 14, 2009)
Freshman, Sophomore and Junior Class Meetings
We initiated a process in which the ME Chair, the Associate Chairs, interested faculty, and the Undergraduate Coordinator meet annually with the freshman, sophomore and junior classes of all three pro-grams to discuss issues and topics of their choosing. (Four dates in March and April, 2009)
Senior Exit Interviews
We initiated a process in which the ME Chair and the Undergraduate Coordinator meet annually with the seniors of all three programs to get feedback on the programs and discuss issues and topics of their choosing. (Three different dates in May, 2009)
32008-2009 Annual Report
U N D E R G R A D U A T E P R O G R A M H I G H L I G H T S
Mechanical Engineering
The undergraduate Mechanical Engineering program is in the process of undergoing a substantial revision to accommodate the needs of the merged Department and the restructured College. The main work involved:
The implementation and fine-tuning the curricular changes approved in May 2008 as well as new changes introduced in academic year 2008-2009.
Specifically, here is a list of some of the changes and improve-ments incurred in Academic Year 08-09:
• Professor Greg McDaniel was installed as the Associ-ate Chair in charge of the ME Program.
• We created a departmental Executive Committee consisting of the Chair, the Associate Chairs and the Director, which met weekly.
• We changed the math requirement from a choice of 2 of 3 courses to two required courses: EK 102 Linear Algebra and ME 366 Probability and Statistics for Me-chanical Engineers (new course).
• We implemented a change from a Core elective to EK 156 and the two math courses listed above for stu-dents graduating in 2012 and beyond.
• The Design Subcommittee proposed changes in the curriculum but this is a long process; not yet imple-mented.
• We created new courses to support a new Concentra-tion in Energy Technologies and Environmental Engi-neering.
• The ME faculty ratified a Department Mission and re-vised ME Program Objectives and Outcomes and set ME program Outcomes Achievement Targets.
• We created experiential components for the Aero-space and Manufacturing concentrations within ME.
• We held a Design Summit with alumni and industry representatives (the best senior Capstone projects in ME, AE and MFG were presented here).
• We created a Leadership Council with our Under-graduate Coordinator and student organization lead-ers to coordinate events.
• We instituted yearly meetings with the Undergradu-ate Committee and Chairman and our various stu-dent groups (met with all ME/AE/MFG freshmen and sophomores in one meeting, separate meetings with ME juniors, AE juniors, MFG juniors). These proved to be extremely revealing and positive engagements.
• We instituted an ME Senior Class Exit Interview with the Chair and the Undergraduate Coordinator.
• We generated a summer reading list for incoming freshmen in Mechanical Engineering that has been piloted this summer.
• We assembled a detailed Self Study for ABET.
Manufacturing Engineering
The undergraduate Manufacturing Engineering program ac-cepted its last freshman class in the fall of 2008. We have now initiated a process in which the degree program will be phased out over the next four years. Students with an inter-est in manufacturing engineering will instead be offered the option of taking a concentration in the discipline, in which the four ME advanced electives are satisfied by four courses from the current MFG curriculum, along with a required ex-periential component that could be satisfied by the Capstone project, undergraduate research, or an industry experience. Other notable FY09 activities related to the MFG program are itemized below.
• Professor Stormy Attaway was installed as the Asso-ciate Chair in charge of the MFG Program.
• We held an IAB meeting in Fall 2008 so that IAB members could pitch senior project ideas to MFG seniors
• The ME Department Chairman and MFG Undergrad-uate Associate Chair met with all the MFG juniors (collectively).
• The ME Department Chairman and the Undergradu-ate Coordinator conducted a MFG Senior Exit Inter-view.
• We began the process of sun-setting two courses: ME 308 Statistics and Quality Engineering, which was offered only one semester and ME 266 Manu-facturing Operations Management.
• We filed a Termination Plan with ABET.
4 www.bu.edu/me/
Aerospace Engineering
The undergraduate Aerospace Engineering program accepted its last freshman class in the fall of 2008. We have now initi-ated a process in which the degree program will be phased out over the next four years. Students with an interest in aero-space engineering will instead be offered the option of taking a concentration in the discipline, in which the four ME advanced electives are satisfied by four courses from the AE curriculum, along with a required experiential component that could be satisfied by the Capstone project, undergraduate research, or an industry experience. Other notable FY09 activities related to the AE program are itemized below.
• Professor Donald Wroblewski was installed as the Associate Chair in charge of the AE Program.
• Two program changes approved in 2007-2008 were implemented:
o Offered new course ME 425 Compressible Flow and Propulsion to replace ME 423 (Compressible Aerodynamics) and ME 405 (Propulsion)
o Added a second technical elective.
• The ME Department Chairman and AE Undergradu-ate Associate Chair met with all the AE juniors (col-lectively).
• The ME Department Chairman and the Undergradu-ate Coordinator conducted an AE Senior Exit Inter-view.
• We filed a Termination Plan with ABET.
G R A D U A T E P R O G R A M H I G H L I G H T S
The ME department now has degree programs in the follow-ing areas:
• MS in Mechanical Engineering
• PhD in Mechanical Engineering
• MS in Manufacturing Engineering
• MS in Global Manufacturing
• MS in MFG with an MBA (a dual degree pro-gram joint with the School of Management)
It is important to note that several ME faculty have second-ary appointments in other Departments and are members of both the Division of Systems Engineering and the Division of Material Science and Engineering. These faculty advise and financially support students in both Divisions as well as stu-dents in the PhD programs in both ECE and BME. Details re-garding enrollments, completed degrees, and awards related to the Graduate Program are given elsewhere in this Report. Below is a short list of fundamental changes brought on by the merger, along with and other notables for FY 2009.
• We are phasing out the MS & PhD programs in AE as well as the PhD program in MFG.
• Courses were eliminated or combined due to duplica-tion and others were phased out. Some courses were significantly revised to reflect the addition of other courses from the department merger and the forma-tion of the MSE Division.
• Established a new math requirement for the mechan-ical engineering PhD program.
• Took the first steps towards establishing a core cur-riculum for the Mechanical Engineering MS program
• Took the first steps towards establishing a new Quali-fying Exam that reflects the needs and scope of the merged department.
52008-2009 Annual Report
Faculty Awards
SEAN ANDERSSON was the winner of the NSF CAREER Award.
JOHN BAILLIEUL was selected as a Fellow of the Society for Indus-trial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM). The organization instituted its fellowship program last year, and Baillieul is among its first class of fellows. He was also honored with 2008 Inaugural Distinguished Lecturer Series Award by College of Engineering, Boston University.
CALIN BELTA was awarded a Young Investigator Research Program grant by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) to con-duct basic research in developing control and communication strate-gies for teams of unmanned vehicles. The three-year AFOSR grants are awarded to early-career scientists and engineers who show ex-ceptional ability and promise for conducting research in aerospace, physics, electronics, life sciences, and chemical and material sciences.
TOM BIFANO received the Bepi Colombo Prize for his career-long research in micro-deformable mirrors for astronomical telescopes. The prize is named for Giuseppe “Bepi” Colombo, an Italian scientist best known for his research on the planet Mercury. The Bepi Prize is awarded every two years to a single researcher for outstanding achievements in research and technology transfer.
ROBIN CLEVELAND won the Departmental Award for Teaching Ex-cellence 2009. He also received a BU College of Engineering Dean’s Catalyst Award for his work with Elise Morgan on the effects of shock wave therapy (SWT) on bone non-unions, a condition where the nat-ural repair response of bone in response to a fracture stops. SRIKANTH GOPALAN received a Massachusetts Technology Investi-gation Award from the Massachusetts Technology Transfer Center (MTTC). The investigation awards, which support proof of concept development to bridge the gap between invention and private sector investment, are conferred to Massachusetts researchers who have developed new technologies that aim to develop into commercially-viable products. He was also a winner of a BU College of Engineering Dean’s Catalyst Award for his research with Vinod Sarin on different methods of storing hydrogen.
R. GLYNN HOLT was named a Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America.
JAMES LYNCH received a Walter Munk Award from The Oceanogra-phy Society in recognition of his work related to the sound and the sea. The Walter Munk Award is granted jointly by The Oceanography Society, the Office of Naval Research and the Office of the Oceanog-rapher of the Navy. According to the society, recipients are selected based on their significant original contributions to the understanding of physical ocean processes related to sound in the sea, and signifi-cant original contributions to the application of acoustic methods .
ELISE MORGAN received a BU College of Engineering Dean’s Cata-lyst Award for her work with Robin Cleveland on the effects of shock wave therapy (SWT) on bone non-unions, a condition where the natural repair response of bone in response to a fracture stops. She was also the winner of the BU College of Engineering Early Career Re-search Excellence Award. The annual Excellence in Research Award celebrates the significant, recent and high-impact research accom-
plishments of tenure-track faculty less than 10 years removed from their PhD. In addition, Elise Morgan received the Vernon T. Tolo Basic Science Paper Award: H Bian, J Aya-ay, A Garces, EF Morgan, SR Gil-bert, HK Kim, “Epiphyseal cartilage plays an important role in revas-cularization of the femoral head following ischemic osteonecrosis,” at the 2009 Annual Meeting of the Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America.
TODD MURRAY was elected as a winner of the International Photo-acoustic and Photothermal Association, IPPA Junior Prize 2009. This prize is awarded for exceptional promise for future leadership in the field, based on their early contributions to the field of Photoacoustic and Photothermal Science and Technology.
RAYMOND NAGEM was voted the College of Engineering Teacher of the Year 2009.
UDAY PAL received a Massachusetts Technology Investigation Award from the Massachusetts Technology Transfer Center (MTTC). The in-vestigation awards, which support proof of concept development to bridge the gap between invention and private sector investment, are conferred to Massachusetts researchers who have developed new technologies that aim to develop into commercially-viable products. He was also the recipient of 2008 TMS Materials Processing and Manufacturing Division Education Resource Award.
ALLAN PIERCE received 2009 Gold Medal of the Acoustical Founda-tion of India.
RONALD A. ROY was the recipient of the Francis Crow Medal that is awarded annually by the University of Maine to alumni who have dis-tinguished themselves in the field of engineering. He was also elected Chair of the Physical Acoustics Technical Committee and Technical Council of the ASA, Acoustical Society of America.
VINOD SARIN was a winner of the BU College of Engineering Dean’s Catalyst Award for his research with Srikanth Gopalan on different methods of storing hydrogen.
ANDRE SHARON was named Massachusetts Technology Investiga-tion Award winner by the Massachusetts Technology Transfer Center (MTTC). The investigation awards, which support proof of concept development to bridge the gap between invention and private sector investment, are conferred to Massachusetts researchers who have developed new technologies that aim to develop into comercially-viable products.
VICTOR YAKHOT was named a Fellow by the American Physical Soci-ety. Less than one-half of one percent of the society’s 46,000 mem-berships is included in this select group. In naming Yakhot a fellow, the APS particularly noted his contributions to the field of turbulence theory.
XIN ZHANG won a BU College of Engineering Dean’s Catalyst Award with Stephan Anderson, a radiologist at the School of Medicine, to develop a new MRI contrast agent that would advance the study of biological systems. She was also named an inaugural Distinguished Faculty Fellow. The Distinguished Faculty Fellows Award is given to tenured College of Engineering faculty who are on a clear trajectory toward exemplary leadership careers in all dimensions of science and engineering. It is a five-year appointment .
6 www.bu.edu/me/
72008-2009 Annual Report
F A C U L T Y A N D S T A F F
Faculty
Sean AnderssonAssistant ProfessorRobotics , Control Theory, Scanning probe microscopy, Symbolic-based control * PhD University of Maryland, College Park 2003 * Associate Editor, Conference Editorial Board, IEEE Cont- rol Systems Society and Robotics and Automation So- ciety * 2009 NSF CAREER Award
Stormy AttawayAssistant Professor &Associate Chair (MFG Undergraduate Program)Educational methods, Computer programming for engineers * PhD Boston University 1988 * 1995 BU College of Engineering Faculty Service Award * 2001 BU College of Engineering Faculty Service Award
John BaillieulProfessorRobotics, Control of mechanical systems,Mathematical system theory, Information-based control theory * PhD Harvard University 1975 * Fellow of the IEEE, 1992, Inaugural Fellow of SIAM 2009 * IEEE Third Millennium Medal, 2000 * Inaugural Distinguished Lecturer Series Award College of Engineering, Boston University, 2008
Lorena A. BarbaAssistant ProfessorFluid dynamics, Novel computer architecturesParticle methods used for fluid simulation * PhD California Institute of Technology 2004 * 2008 Rising Star Teaching Award for the Faculty of Sci- ence, University of Bristol, UK
Paul BarboneAssociate ProfessorTheoretical & computational (bio) mechanicsand (bio) acoustics, Medical (ultrasound) imagingInverse problems, Finite element methods * PhD Stanford University 1991 * 1995 Young Investigator Award ONR * 2000 Fulbright Distiguished Scholar Award * 2007 Fellow of Acoustical Society of America
Eytan BarouchProfessorSimulation of industrial processes, Numerical analysis,Algorithm development * PhD University of New York at Stony Brook 1969
Soumendra BasuProfessorThin films for energy, photonic, electronic, and superconducting applications; thermal barrier and environmental barrier coatings for gas turbine and fuel cell applications; environmental degradation of materials at elevated temperatures; structure and stability of inter- faces; and characterization of structure and phase transformations in materials using electron microscopy techniques * PhD Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1989
Calin BeltaAssistant ProfessorVerification and control of dynamical systems, Hybrid sys-tems, Symbolic control, Robot motion planning and control Gene and metabolic networks * PhD University of Pennsylvania 2003 * 1997 Fulbright Study Award * 2005 NSF CAREER Award * 2008 AFOSR Young Investigator Award
James BethuneAssociate ProfessorComputer-aided Design * EdD Boston University 1991 * 1994 Alumni of the Year * 1981 College of Engineering Professor of the Year
Thomas BifanoProfessor and Director, Photonics CenterDeformable Mirrors, Microelectromechanical Systems (MEMS)Adaptive Optics, Biphotonic Microscopy, Astronomical Telescope Instrumentation, Laser Wavefront Control * PhD North Carolina State University 1988 * Associate Editor, Journal of Micro/Nanolithography, MEMS and MOEMS * 2009 Bepi Colombo Prize
Michael CaramanisProfessorMathematical programming, control and stochastic systems * PhD Harvard University 1976 * 2004 BU College of Engineering Service Award * Past Editor, IIE Transactions in Design and Manufacturing * Member of editorial board, IIE Transactions in Design and Manu- facturing
William CareyProfessorUnderwater Autonomous Systems, Multiphase media, Acoustic arrays, Vibration and Acoustic Signal Processing, Sound Radiation and Scattering * PhD The Catholic University of America 1974 * 1986 Fellow of Acoustical Society of America * Past Chief Editor, IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering * Fellow IEEE
FACULTY AND STAFF
Faculty
8 www.bu.edu/me/
Robin ClevelandAssociate ProfessorShock Wave Lithotripsy, Acoustic Imaging, Medical Ultrasonics, Sonic Boom Propagation * PhD University of Texas at Austin 1995 * 1995 F. V. Hunt Fellow of ASA * 2000 R. Bruce Lindsay Award of the Acoustical Society of America * 2009 ME Department Award of Teaching Excellence
Daniel ColeProfessorManufacturing of semiconductor devices, Electro- dynamic systems, Microlithography simulation models and methods * PhD City University of New York 1985 * Reviewer for several journals * 2005, 2007, 2008 MFG Department Award of Teaching Excellence
Theo de WinterAssociate ProfessorSuperconductivity, Cryogenics, Heat transfer, Product design, Magnetic systems application * MechE MIT 1961 * 1997 College of Engineering Faculty Service Award * 1985, 1988, 2000, 2007 College of Engineering Professor of the Year * 2002 BU Metcalf Award for Excellence in Teaching
Pierre DupontProfessorRobot kinematics, dynamics and control; Medical applications of robotics, Image guidance of minimally invasive surgery * PhD Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 1988 * Associate Vice President of Publications, IEEE Robot- ics and Automation Society
Kamil EkinciAssociate ProfessorNanomechanics, Nanofluidics, Nanophotonics, Applications of MEMS and NEMS * PhD Brown University 1999 * 2007 NSF CAREER Award * 2007 BU College of Engineering Dean’s Catalyst Award
Michael GevelberAssociate ProfessorElectrospinning of nanofibers, Plasma spray, Ebeam deposition, Crystal growth, CVD * PhD Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1988
Srikanth GopalanAssociate ProfessorFuel cells, Chemical thermodynamics, Kinetics and transport phenomena to model the behavior of electrochemical systems * PhD University of Utah 1997
Sheryl GraceAssociate ProfessorAerodynamics, Fluid dynamics, Acoustics * PhD University of Notre Dame 1995 * 2001 AIAA National Faculty Advisor Award * 2002 BU College of Engineering Faculty Service Award * 2005 AIAA Associate Fellow
Yehonathan HazonyProfessorComputer methods for industrial automation, Robotics and education * PhD Hebrew University, Israel 1965 * 1979 American Chemical Society’s Arthur K. Doolittle Award
R. Glynn HoltAssociate ProfessorPhysical Acoustics, Sonoluminescence, Rheology of Foam, Biomedical Acoustics and High-Intensity Focused Ultra-sound * PhD University of Mississippi 1988 * Fellow, Acoustical Society of America
Michael HoweProfessorFluid mechanics, Acoustics, Structural vibrations * PhD Imperial College, England 1969 * Fellow, Acoustical Society of America * Fellow, Institute of Acoustics, UK * 2000 Per Bruel Gold Medal of the ASME * 2007 Rayleigh Medal of the Institute of Acoustics
Jian-Qiang HuAssociate ProfessorDiscrete event systems, Optical communication networks, Queueing networks, Production and inventory systems,Simulation * PhD Harvard University 1990
Mort IsaacsonAssociate ProfessorEngineering education, Engineering ethics, Interdisciplinary interactions between technology and society * PhD Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1974 * 1993 and 1998 BU College of Engineering, Faculty Service Award
Catherine KlapperichAssistant ProfessorNanomechanics of hydrated biomaterials implants, Tissue engineering sca�old materials, Drug delivery, Bio-micro electromechanical systems (BioMEMs) * PhD University of California, Berkeley 2000 * 1994-1997 NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
Xi LinAssistant ProfessorMaterials theory, Predictive simulation of materials electronic, optical, magnetic, and mechanical properties * PhD Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2003
J. Gregory McDanielAssociate Professor &Associate Chair (ME Undergraduate Program)Structural acoustics, Automotive brake squeal,Biological vibrations, Ocean wave energy * PhD The Georgia Institute of Technology 1992 * 2000 NSF CAREER Award * 2006 Fellow, Acoustical Society of America * 2006 BU College of Engineering Professor of the Year
New Ventures
92008-2009 Annual Report
Elise MorganAssistant ProfessorMechanical behavior of biological materials, Mechanical stimulation of tissue di�erentiation, Micromechanics of multiscale media, Damage mechanics * PhD University of California, Berkeley 2002 * 2005 International Osteoporosis Foundation–Servier Young Investigator Research Award * 2009 Early Career Research Excellence Award, BU COE
Todd MurrayAssistant ProfessorLaser ultrasonics, Nanoscale materials characterization, Acoustic wave propagation, Optical sensors and NDE, Photorefractive materials and devices, Optoacoustic imaging * PhD Johns Hopkins University 1998 * 2002 BU SPRInG Award * 2005 NSF CAREER Award
Ray NagemAssociate ProfessorStructural dynamics, Random vibration, Wave propagation, Inverse problems * PhD Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1988 * 1999 BU Metcalf Award for Excellence in Teaching * 2002, 2003, 2009 BU COE Professor of the Year * 2008 BU Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering Award for Teaching Excellence
Uday PalProfessor &Division Head, Division of Materials Science and EngineeringFuel cells, Chemical thermodynamics, Kinetics and transport phenomena to model the behavior of electro-chemical systems * PhD Pennsylvania State University 1984 * Principal Editor, Journal of Materials Research
James R. PerkinsAssociate ProfessorReal-time scheduling and control of manufacturing systemsSupply chain management, Resource pricing and congestion control in communications networks * PhD University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign 1993 * 2002-2004 Department of Manufacturing Engineering Award for Teaching Excellence
Allan PierceProfessorWave propagation and scattering in heterogeneous materi-als, Acoustical oceanography, underwater sound, Wind turbines, Structural acoustics and vibrations * PhD Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1962 * 1992 Rayleigh Lecturer, ASME * 1995 Per Bruel Gold Medal, ASME * Editor-in-Chief, Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
Tyrone PorterAssistant ProfessorIntegration of ultrasound technologies with chemical and biomolecular engineered vesicles for diagnostic and thera-peutic applications * PhD University of Washington 2003 * 2003 Acoustical Society of America (ASA) Frederick V. Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowship * 2008 ASA R. Bruce Lindsay Young Investigator Award
Ronald A. RoyProfessor & ChairmanPhysical acoustics, Medical ultrasonics for imaging and therapy, Bubble dynamics, Nonlinear acoustics, Acousto optics * PhD Yale University 1987 * 1993 Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America * 2006-2007 65th George Eastman Distinguished Visiting Professor, University of Oxford, UK
Vinod K. SarinProfessorMaterials Science, Surface Modification, Physical and,Chemical Vapor Deposition, Consolidation of Ceramics/Composites, Structure/Property Correlations, Transparent Optical Ceramics and Scintallator Materials. * PhD Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1971 * 1984 GTE’s Leslie H. Warner Achievement Award * Over 80 US and International Patents
Andre SharonProfessor & Director, Fraunhofer Center for Manufacturing InnovationElectromechanical machine design, controls, automation, biotech/biomedical instrumentation, devices, & rapid micro-diagnostics platforms * PhD Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1988 * Editor-in-Chief International Journal of Robotics and Computer Integrated Manufacturing
Pirooz VakiliAssociate Professor &Associate Division Head, Division of Systems EngineeringMonte Carlo simulation and optimization, Control and management of manufacturing and communication systems Product development management, Computational finance, Computational biology * PhD Harvard University 1989 * Member of IEEE
Hua WangAssociate ProfessorControl of nonlinear dynamics, intelligent systems and control, complex networks, cooperative control, robotics, and applications in biological, energy and aerospace systems. * PhD University of Maryland, College Park, 1993 * 2000 Cheung Kong Scholar, Ministry of Education, China and Li Ka Shing Foundation, Hong Kong, China * 2001 Senior Member IEEE
Donald WroblewskiAssociate Professor &Associate Chair (AERO Undergraduate Program)Experimental fluid mechanics and heat transfer,Atmospheric turbulence, Plasma deposition * PhD University of California, Berkeley 1990 * 2006 NRC/Air Force Senior Associateship Award * 1999 and 2006 Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering Department Award for Teaching Excellence
Victor Yakhot ProfessorTurbulence theory, Modeling and large-scale engineering simulations, Industrial CFD, Heat transfer, Mixing and combution, Lattice Boltzmann methods for flow computations Non-Newtonian fluids, Nanotechnology and nanofluidics * PhD Moscow State University, Russia 1971 * 2007 Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering Department Award for Excellence in Teaching
Katherine Yanhang ZhangClare Boothe Luce Assistant Professor Mechanical behavior of soft biological tissue, Cardiovascular mechanics, Multi-scale modeling of biological composites, Micro- and nano- mechanics of thin film devices * PhD University of Colorado at Boulder 2003 * 2006 Clare Boothe Luce Assistant Professorship * 2007 Young Faculty Award DARPA/MTO
Xin Zhang Associate ProfessorMicroelectromechanical Systems (MEMS)/NEMS; Specificissues related to materials science, micro/nanomechanicsand micro/nanofabrication technologies motivated bypractical applications in micro and nanoscale engineering * PhD Hong Kong University of Science and Technology 1998 * NSF Faculty CAREER Award, 2003 * COE Distinguished Faculty Fellow, 2008
10 www.bu.edu/me/
The Mechanical Engineering Department welcomed one new faculty member in the fall of 2008, LORENA BARBA. Originally from Chile, Assistant Professor Barba is a computational scientist and a fluid dynamicist who obtained her PhD in Aeronautics from California Institute of Technology. Her research is focused on fluid dynamics, novel computer architectures, development of fast and efficient algorithms, as well as particle methods used for fluid simulation. Prior to joining the Department, she served as a Lecturer in Applied Mathematics at the University of Bristol, U.K. In addition, she is an accomplished jazz singer, and a licensed pilot.
A new faculty Search Committee headed by Xin Zhang made recommendations that led to the following three junior hires:
• Matthias Schneider, PhD, Max Planck Institute for biophysical Chemistry, Goettingen, Ger-many. Currently Assistant Professor of Physics at the University of Augsburg. Matthias’ expertise is in acoustically driven micro-fluidics, the application of surface acoustic waves in biotechnology, and lipid membrane hydrodynamics. His start date is September, 2009.
• Harold Park, PhD, Northwestern University. Currently Assistant Prof. of Mechanical Engi-neering at University of Colorado, Boulder. Harold works in the areas of computational mechan-ics, material science, and interdisciplinary nano-science. His start date is January 2010.
• Aaron Schmidt, PhD, MIT. Currently a postdoc at the University of Michigan. Aaron’s focus is on the on photo-thermal characterization of nano-scale heat transport and interfacial phenome-
na as well as thermal-fluids engineering and energy conversion. His start date is September 2010.
A D D I T I O N S T O T H E M E S T A F F
In FY 2009, the Department added three new staff members to its front office. One of these positions (Undergraduate Coordinator) is a new position. Another (Communications Coordinator) was frozen and is currently staffed on an interim basis. We intend to permanently fill this position at the first available opportunity.
• Megan Cunniff, Graduate Coordinator. Megan oversees the overall administration of the graduate programs, working closely with Associate Chair Xin Zhang. She also coordinates graduate teaching activities.
• Caity Fair, Undergraduate Coordinator. Caity oversees the overall administration of the undergraduate programs, working closely with Associate Chairs McDaniel, Attaway, and Wroblewski.
• Magda Hanna, Grants Administrator. Hanna oversees all the research grant activities within the Mechanical Engineering Depart-ment.
• Saana McDaniel, Communications Coordinator. Saana oversees activities related to external departmental communications. This includes the web site, departmental reports, news releases, outreach activities, etc. She also provides administrative support to the
Chair, Ronald A. Roy, and the Director, James Langell.
New Faculty and Staff
Professor Lorena A. Barba
Megan Cuniff Caity Fair Magda Hanna Saana McDaniel
112008-2009 Annual Report
Adjunct , Research, Vis i t ing and Associated FacultyA D J U N C T F A C U L T Y
William Hauser Adjunct Assistant Professor
Peter Kerney Senior Lecturer
Michael Koplow Senior Lecturer
Robert Lund Adjunct Professor
Adam Clayton Powell Lecturer
R E S E A R C H F A C U L T Y
Gianni Campion Research Associate
Anirban Chatterjee Research Associate
Parag Chitnis Research Associate
Jon Collis Research Associate
Richard Evans Senior Research Associate
Claudia Ionascu Research Associate Minghai Li Research Associate
Nick Manzi Research Assistant
James McLaughlan Research Associate
Mohsen Mohammady Assistant Research Professor
Lauren O’Malley Research Associate
Frederic Padilla Research Associate
V I S I T I N G F A C U L T Y
Niamh Nowlan Visiting Scholar
Yanwu Wang Visiting Scholar
A S S O C I A T E D F A C U L T YMary Bouxsein Adjunct Assistant Professor
Helen Fawcett Research Assistant Professor
Ted Fritz Professor
James Lynch Adjunct Professor
Ed Sullivan Senior Research Associate
StaffA D M I N I S T R A T I V E S T A F F
James Langell Director
Steve Wolk Finance Manager
Magda Hanna Grants Administrator
Megan Cunniff Academic Programs Manager
Caity Fair Undergraduate Coordinator Sarah Cowen Distance Learning Administra- tor (until April 2009)
Andrew Abrahamson Research Assistant, Distance Learning Program
Ryan Flament Administrative Assistant
Saana McDaniel Communications Coordinator
T E C H N I C A L S T A F F
David Campbell Laboratory Engineer
Joseph Estano Laboratory Supervisor
Kara Mogensen Laboratory Supervisor
Gerry Sheppard Laboratory Supervisor
Bob Sjostrom Senior CIMLAB Specialist
12 www.bu.edu/me/
U N D E R G R A D U A T E P R O G R A M SThe Department of Mechanical Engineering offers a multidis-ciplinary educational experience in which accredited degrees are currently offered in three programs: Aerospace Engineer-ing (AE), Mechanical Engineering (ME), and Manufacturing Engineering (MFG). Our undergraduate programs emphasize process as well as product, so that our graduates not only de-velop the necessary technical skills required for immediate en-try into industry or graduate school, but also continue to edu-cate themselves and to prosper in a society whose problems will require increasingly multi-disciplinary solutions.
The result of a recent merger between the Department of Manufacturing Engineering and the Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, the new Department of Mechan-ical Engineering will offer incoming ME students starting in the Fall of 2009 the option of getting an accredited foundational degree in ME with optional Concentrations in Aerospace or Manufacturing. These students will receive the best of both worlds: a foundational degree in arguably the broadest and most marketable degree program in engineering (ME) with specialized training in the alternate discipline.
The eclectic portfolio of the new ME Department is well suit-ed to providing students with both classroom and laboratory exposure to a broad range of engineering activity. Technical competence and focus is established through electives, a de-sign thread that carries seamlessly through the sophomore through senior years, and – for those who choose to pursue it – research opportunities through faculty in the Department and the College. The curricula culminate in senior “capstone” design projects in which teams of students tackle difficult multi-faceted design projects, often stemming from the needs of faculty research or industry partners. The Department con-tinues to maintain state-of-the-art laboratories for demonstra-tion and projects in the various undergraduate courses.
During the year, we continued to strengthen all undergraduate programs, utilizing a continuous improvement process in the newly established Department which drew on best practices from the former Aerospace & Mechanical and Manufactur-ing Engineering Departments. The continuous improvement process for the Mechanical Engineering program, which had been in place for years, was strengthened with the addition of student group interviews.
132008-2009 Annual Report
Mechanical Engineering Program Objectives (Ratified by the ME Faculty March 2009)
Graduates of the program will be prepared to:
• Join a technically sophisticated workforce as successful, practicing engineers in a wide range of mechanical engineering fields.
• Continuously improve and expand their technical and professional skills through formal means as well as through in-formal self-study.
• Pursue advanced degrees in engineering, business, or other professional fields.
• Advance themselves professionally and personally by accepting responsibilities and pursuing leadership roles.
Mechanical Engineering Program Outcomes (Ratified by the ME Faculty November 2008)
(a) an ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering
(b) an ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data
(c) an ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints such as economic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health and safety, manufacturability, and sustainability
(d) an ability to function on multidisciplinary teams
(e) an ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems
(f) an understanding of professional and ethical responsibility
(g) an ability to communicate effectively
(h) the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global, economic, environ-mental, and societal context
(i) a recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in life-long learning
(j) a knowledge of contemporary issues
(k) an ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
(l) an ability to interpret results of analysis of physical systems, components, or processes, and utilize physical insight to check for realistic outcomes
(m) an ability to model and design in the thermal systems area
(n) an ability to model and design in the mechanical systems area
Object ives and outcomes
14 www.bu.edu/me/
Enrol lment
Mechanical Aerospace Manufacturing TotalFreshmen* 62 32 5 99Sophomores* 71 38 13 122Juniors 68 24 12 104Seniors 51 27 29 107Total 252 121 59 432
*Note: ENG Students are not required to declare their major until their Junior year.
History of Undergraduate Degree Enrollment
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
Fall
99
Fall
00
Fall
01
Fall
02
Fall
03
Fall
04
Fall
05
Fall
06
Fall
07
Fall
08
/012(341()"
506789(10"
/(3:;(1<:643="
Mechanical
Aerospace
Manufacturing
Undergraduate Degrees Awarded
2530 16
38
20
19
19
38
2726
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
14
43
18
31
24
35
29
23
28
56
17
47
29
53
26
60
21
5848
Manufacturing
Aerospace
Mechanical
25
152008-2009 Annual Report
Courses Offered
Course Num-ber
Course Title Fall 2008 Spring 2009 Summer 2009
EK 102 Introduction to Linear Algebra for Engineers BarouchHazony
Hazony Attaway
EK 127 Engineering Computation Attaway Attaway Attaway
EK 130/1/2 Introduction to Engineering BarouchBethuneBifanode WinterHazonyHoltSarin
BarouchBethunede WinterGopalanHoltSarin
EK 156 Design and Manufacture de Winter de Winter
EK 301 Engineering Mechanics I AnderssonHazonyB. RoyK. Zhang
Kerney Nagem
EK 409 Engineering Economy de Winter de Winter de Winter
ME 201 Introduction to Aircraft Performance Grace
ME 202 Introduction to Spacecraft Performance Nagem
ME 266 Manufacturing Operations Management Hauser Hauser
ME 302 Engineering Mechanics II Porter Porter Nagem
ME 303 Fluid Mechanics Cleveland Barba
ME 304 Energy and Thermodynamics Lin Gopalan Kerney
ME 305 Mechanics of Materials Morgan PierceX. Zhang
ME 306 Introduction to Materials Science Sarin Basu
ME 307 Flight Structures Nagem
ME 308 Statistics and Quality Engineering Caramanis Barouch
ME 309 Structural Mechanics Nagem
ME 310 Instrumentation and Theory Experiments Murray Holt
ME 311 Engineering Design Using CAD Bethune Bethune
ME 312 Fundamentals of Engineering Design Bethune Bethune
ME 345 Automation and Manufacturing Methods Gevelber
ME 400 Engineering Mathematics Howe Howe
ME 403 Atmospheric Flight Mechanics and Control Wang
ME 404 Dynamics and Control of Mechanical Systems Andersson
ME 406 Dynamics of Space Vehicles Nagem
ME 407 Computer-Aided Design Manufacture Cole de Winter
ME 409 Flight Vehicles Design I Wroblewski
ME 410 Flight Vehicles Design II Wroblewski
ME 411 Operations Research
ME 413 Machine Design I IsaacsonKoplow
16 www.bu.edu/me/
Course Num-ber
Course Title Fall 2008 Spring 2009 Summer 2009
ME 414 Machine Design II IsaacsonKoplow
ME 415 Product Design Cole
ME 419 Heat Transfer K. Zhang
ME 420 Supply Chain Engineering Perkins
ME 421 Aerodynamics Yakhot
ME 422 Fluid Mechanics II Yakhot
ME 425 Compressible Flow and Propulsion Grace
ME 430 Energy Conversion Carey
ME 441 Mechanical Vibrations McDaniel
ME 465 Materials Processing Powell
ME 495 Senior Design Capstone in Manufacturing Engineering de Winter
ME 500 Special Topics in Mechanical Engineering Gevelber
ME 501 Dynamic System Theory Baillieul
ME 502 Intellectual Assets: Creation, Protection, and Commercializa-tion Cole
ME 503 Kinetic Processes in Materials Basu
ME 504 Polymers and Soft Materials Klapperich
ME 505 Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics Gopalan
ME 507 Process Modeling and Control Gevelber
ME 508 Computational Methods in Materials Science Lin
ME 510 Production Systems Analysis Perkins
ME 514 Simulation for Manufacturing Vakili
ME 515 Vibration of Complex Mechanical Systems Pierce
ME 517 Product Development Hauser
ME 520 Acoustics I Carey
ME 521 Continuum Mechanics for Biomedical Engineers Stamenovic
ME 523 Mechanics of Biomaterials Klapperich
ME 525 Technology Ventures Cole
ME 534 Material Technology for Microelectronics Basu
ME 542 Advanced Fluid Mechanics Howe
ME 545 Electrochemistry of Fuel Cells and Batteries Gopalan Pal
ME 555 MEMS: Fabrication and Materials X. Zhang
ME 560 Precision Machine Design and Instrumentation Sharon
ME 570 Robot Motion Planning Belta
ME 579 Microelectronic Device Manufacturing Cole
ME 580 Theory of Elasticity Barbone
ME 582 Mechanical Behavior of Materials Murray
ME 583 Product Management Hauser
Note: The 500 level courses are cross-listed between the undergraduate and graduate programs.
172008-2009 Annual Report
Student AwardsKAREN CHIEN NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
NICHOLAS DOUCETTE Student Leader Alumni Award
JULIA DELOGU Anita Cuadrado Memorial Award
VADIM GUREVICH Outstanding Dean’s Host
JENNIFER HARRIS Earle and Mildred Bailey Memorial Award
GIANNI JAVIER NSF REU Award, June 2009
AMY JONES Outstanding Dean’s Host
ANDREW LeGENDRE Harold C. Case Scholarship and second place Winner of 5th Annual Undergrad uate Design Portfolio Contest, spon- sored by The Merrill Ebner Fund
CHARLIE LISSANDRELLO NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
SAMUEL MINKOFF Third place Winner of 5th Annual Undergraduate Design Portfolio Con- test, sponsored by The Merrill Ebner Fund
KEVIN RYAN Harold C. Case Scholarship
JOSEPH SHIFRIN First place Winner of 5th Annual Under graduate Design Portfolio Contest, sponsored by The Merrill Ebner Fund
ROXANNA WALKER Clare Boothe Luce Award
WEN XIAO BU STAR Award and BU Work Study Award
JONAH ZIMMERMAN Student Leader Alumni Award and the Sigma Gamma Tau Student Award.
Student Advisor Service Award: ASHLEY ALFS, TINA BOURGEOIS, JULIA DELOGU, ADAM DETWILER, VADIM GUREVICH, DIONTE HEN-DERSON, ANN SHEDD, and KYLE WINTERS
Outstanding Capstone Design Project in Aerospace Engineering: “Mach A: Next Generation Rocket Racer” – KYLE BRIDGEO, NICHO-LAS DOUCETTE, VADIM GUREVICH, ROSHAN KALGHATGI, and JONAH ZIMMERMAN
Outstanding Capstone Design Project in Manufacturing Engineering: “Harpoon Brewery Team: Automated Packaging of Assorted Cases” – PATRICK CRAWFORD, HUMBERTO GARZA, ANN SHEDD, and NICOLE WIART
Outstanding Capstone Design Project in Mechanical Engineering: “Wave-in-a-Box” – MELISSA BOWLER, LAWRENCE JOHNSTON, STE-VEN MARSH, JEFFREY NORELL, and EUGENIA ROMANTSEVA
Andrew LeGendre (l.) and Kevin Ryan (r.)
Roxanna Walker
18 www.bu.edu/me/
Student Organizat ionsAIAA – American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
AIAA is the principal society for the aerospace profession, pro-viding for the advancement and dissemination of knowledge of the theory and practice of the aeronautical and astronau-tical sciences. BU’s chapter of the AIAA is a small, collegiate level branch of the national chapter. AIAA hosts industry and academic speakers, contests and general meetings catered towards the aerospace and aeronautical fields. Their primary goal is to raise awareness among undergraduates about the opportunities and advances in the aerospace community.
ASME – American Society of Mechanical Engineers
This national society, with more than 100,000 regular members and 250 student sections, is dedi-cated to advancing the profession of mechanical engineering. Members are active at all levels of almost every segment
of business, industry, education, and government. Member-ship in the student section brings students into contact with practicing engineers through technical meetings with guest speakers, field trips to local industries, and regional and na-tional society functions, including the regular meetings of the Boston section of ASME. Upon graduation, student members can become associate members of the society.
BU Rocket Team
The BU Rocket Team is a branch of the AIAA. The team’s goal is to conduct research into hybrid rocket motor design, and is therefore more directed at the optimization of hy-brid motors rather than the launching
of a rocket. The team allows students to use innovation and ingenuity outside of a class environment. The team’s members set their own deadlines, track their progress, report findings and encourage each other almost daily. The design process goes from chalkboard and CAD drawings to machining and as-sembling by testing the untapped engineering skills of each member. BURT has a very promising future and as Vice Presi-dent Nick Doucette puts it, “BURT develops some of the best engineering students at BU.”
BU SEDS - Students for the Exploration and Development of
Space
Students for the Explora-tion and Development of Space is a new student group at Boston Univer-sity. This group is dedi-cated to expanding the role of human exploration
and development of space. Student members participate in national conferences and host academic and industry speak-ers throughout the year. This year five members attended the International Space Development Conference in Orlando, FL.
IIE – Institute of Industrial Engineers
The Institute of Industrial Engineers aims to promote a better environment for successful engineers by bridging the gap between school and industry. Mem-bers familiarize them-selves with the intricacies
of industry though plant tours, speakers, and hands-on experi-ences. The organization helps to provide students with insight into careers in industrial engineering. This year’s high-lights include Pumpkin Carving, Trivia Night, Pinewood Derby Race, and Senior Banquet.
Pi Tau Sigma Honor Society
Pi Tau Sigma is the national mechanical engineering honor society. The objectives of this society are to encourage and recognize the achievements of undergraduate students in me-chanical engineering, to foster high ideals in the engineering profession, to develop leadership and citizenship, to stimulate and support departmental activities, and to honor practicing engineers for distinguished technical attainments.
SAE – Society of Automotive Engineers
The Society of Automotive Engineers comprises 50,000 engi-neers and scientists working together to advance the field of mobility. With their diverse educational backgrounds, mem-bers are dedicated to furthering the research, development, design, manufacture, and utilization of land, sea, air, and space vehicles.
192008-2009 Annual Report
Sigma Gamma Tau Honor Society
Sigma Gamma Tau is the honor society for Aerospace Engi-neering. The objective of the society is to recognize and honor those individuals in the field of aeronautics and astronautics who have, through scholarship, integrity, and outstanding achievement, been a credit to their profession. The society seeks to foster a high standard of ethics and professional prac-tice and to create a spirit of loyalty and fellowship, particularly among students of aerospace engineering.
Members of Society of Automotive Engineers
SME – Society of Manufacturing Engineers
This professional so-ciety stimulates re-search and dissemi-nates knowledge in all phases of manufactur-ing engineering. Stu-dent members par-ticipate in field trips, technical seminars, and lecture series,
and are upgraded automatically to regular society member-ship one year after graduation. This year SME hosted a guest speaker Bill Harding from GE. They had successful company tours and Egg Drop event. SME closed the year with a Manu-facturing Dinner.
20 www.bu.edu/me/
2009 Aerospace Engineering Seniors (top), Manufacturing Engineering Seniors (bottom) and Mechanical Engineering Seniors on page 24.
212008-2009 Annual Report
Senior Design Projects
Project Title Team MembersAlcmene: Mothership UAV for Delivering Indoor Uninhabited Aerial Systems Chizinski, Delogu, Giammalvo, Messer, Tolentino
Hyperion: Electric UAV for Aerial Reconnaissance from Unmanned Surface Vehicles Bartlett, Bonhomme-Isaiah, Jones, Reynolds, Winters
A/B-1 FOG: High Altitude Close Air Support Aircraft Fultz, Loycano, Ma, Phillips, Thorley, Ward
C-76 Atlas: Next Generation Strategic Airlifter Bentson, Butler, Chan, Rodriguez, Mikheev
Mach A: Next Generation Rocket Racer Winning Team Bridgeo, Doucette, Gurevich, Kalghatgi, Zimmerman
Aerospace Engineering
The Aerospace Engineering program culminates with a senior “capstone” design project in which teams of students tackle difficult multi-faceted design projects. The students enroll in a two-semester Flight Vehicle Design course (ME 409 & 410). During these courses each team conceives, plans, and carries out a significant aerospace vehicle design project in which each team member concentrates on a separate technical area. At the Senior Project Conference all the teams give an oral pre-sentation of their projects. This year the winner was the Mach A: Rocket Racer Team, Kyle Bridgeo, Nicholas Doucette, Vadim Gurevich, Roshan Kalghatgi and Jonah Zimmerman who de-signed a next generation Rocket Racer.
By combining the exhilarating rush of Formula One racing with the thrill of roaring rocket engines, the Rocket Racing League (RRL) entertains spectators with a new, high intensity sport. Founded in 2005, the RRL pits rocket powered aircraft against each other on a course designed to push the performance en-
velope. Using short periods of burn coupled with spectacular maneuvers and glide segments, the Rocket Racers race in front of live crowds and fans at home.
The current Rocket Racer is an adapted Velocity SE kit plane retrofitted with an XCOR rocket engine. Due to the original purpose of the Velocity SE, Mach A believes the current mod-el does not meet the demands of a high performance rocket powered aircraft. To address this deficiency, Mach A has de-veloped a next-generation Rocket Racer, which is faster, more maneuverable and ultimately more entertaining. This was done by combining an innovative liquid rocket engine capable of providing 8800 lbs. of thrust, a unique and streamlined air-craft profile with a robust underlying structure, and a dynamic control system designed to achieve high performance and maneuverability. Together, these remarkable features are con-tained within a novel and aesthetically pleasing design.
Due to this unique mission, the Mach A aircraft structural design addresses the issues of creating a structure to with-stand high-g maneuvers in a race course environment while maintaining a relatively low-weight capable of optimizing its periods of glide. The design addresses these issues in the materials selection and analysis as well as the optimization of structural members and systems in accordance with the loads analysis conducted throughout the design process. Further, layout concerns necessitate the need for a wing-box without a fuselage carry-through. Additionally special consideration is given to the design of the tail booms as they must opti-mize weight while carrying the full lifting force applied by the tail. All of these concerns are addressed utilizing both com-posite and metal materials as certain elements require the strength and weight properties of composites while all other elements utilize aircraft grade aluminum for its cost efficiency.
Winning Team
22 www.bu.edu/me/
Manufacturing Engineering
Project Title Team Members
Harpoon Brewery Team: Automated Packaging of Assorted Cases
Winning team
Crawford, Garza, Wiart, Shedd
Raytheon: Value Stream Mapping of Missile Rework Farber, Rocheleau, Weber
Z Corporation: Optimization of 3-D Printer Lines Alfs, Detwiler, Diep, Ogucu
New Balance: Redesign of Upper Stitching Fixtures Green, John, Regojo, Tong
Necco: Improving the Drying Process for Candy Wafers Allen, Mainzhausen, Menking, Stephenson
Codman Division, Johnson & Johnson: Sterile Packaging Line & U-shaped Produc-tion Cell Redesign
Al Sayegh, Kang, Kaynar, Shammout
Axcelis: Vacuum Pump Mounting Fixture Design & Fabrication Escoto, Hubbard, Kyung Lee, Packard
Winning Team
The Manufacturing Engineering program culminates with a senior “capstone” design project in which teams of stu-dents tackle difficult multi-faceted design projects. The stu-dents enroll in the Product Design course ME 415 in the fall and then in the Senior Design Capstone in Manufacturing Engineering during the spring of their senior year (ME 495). During this course, they work in teams. Each team has an industrial customer for whom they work one day a week on typical manufacturing project. The teams are responsible for giving weekly progress reports to their industrial cus-tomers and to the supervising faculty. The final project re-ports are presented at the Senior Project Conference. This year the winning team, the Harpoon Brewery Team, Patrick Crawford, Humberto Garza, Ann Shedd and Nicole Wiart, worked at the Harpoon Brewery. The team constructed a manufacturing system to sort variety packs of beer. The Harpoon Brewery plans to use this system from now on in their packaging facility.
232008-2009 Annual Report
Mechanical Engineering
Project Title Team Members
Dual Resistance Concentric Muscle Trainer Al-Husseini, Ayrikyan, Macris, Maloney, Sharkey
Lumalign – Bulk Feed Attachment for a Reverse Vending Machine Can Collector Brady, Bustin, Laing, Lovett
Chamber for Ultrasonic Testing of Individual Biological Cells Benn, Calcara, Long, Sanders, Weldon
Bioreactor System for Tissue Engineered Blood Vessels Chin, Fung, Hasan, Sefrioui, Szeto
DampIT – Vibration Isolation System for Roof Mounted Camera Cai, Chalupa, Henderson, Mason, Munson
Underwater Field Observer – Housing for Underwater Camera Clausen, Durkin, Harris, Murphy, Wilinski
Sun Spy – Mechanical Sun Tracking Device for Solar Ovens Bourgeois, Davis, Groll, Lissandrello, Neidorff
The Elevation Azimuth Tracker for Solar Ovens Campbell, Davidsson, Johnson, Lim, Valeri
Wave-In-A-Box – Wave Motion Simulator Winning team Bowler, Johnston, Marsh, Norell, Romantseva
Vertical Wave Simulator – A Testing Apparatus for Ocean Wave Energy Convert-ers
Axten, Burbank, Deane, Southard, Walker
Winning Team
The Mechanical Engineering program also culminates with a senior “capstone” design project in which teams of students tackle difficult multi-faceted design projects, often stemming from faculty research. The students enroll in a two-semester Machine Design course (ME 413 & 414). During these courses the teams conceive, plan, and carry out a major mechanical engineering design of a multicomponent system. Each team gives an oral presentation of its project at the Senior Project Conference, where one team is declared a winner.
This year the winner was the Wave-in-a-Box Team, Melissa Bowler, Lawrence Johnston, Steven Marsh, Jeffrey Norell and Eugenia Romantseva, who developed Vertical Wave Stimula-tor. The lab apparatus is used to facilitate model testing of Wave Energy Converters.
The team designed a laboratory-scale ocean wave simula-tor for Professor J. Gregory McDaniel’s research into ocean wave energy. The system creates a simulated ocean wave en-vironment for testing specific wave energy collectors (WECs) known as point absorbers. Point absorbers are relatively small compared to the wave-length of ocean waves and require only the vertical displacement of the wave to stimulated the ap-propriate ocean environment. Currently, the majority of exist-ing wave tanks are 30 to 40 meters long and several meters wide and deep. Wave-in-a-Box is unique in that it is scaled to fit within a small laboratory while still creating user defined waves with a period comparable to natural ocean waves.
24 www.bu.edu/me/
252008-2009 Annual Report
G R A D U A T E P R O G R A M S
Two new PhD students were awarded Dean’s Fellowships (DFs) and matriculated in Fall 2008. Seven new doctoral students matriculated with Graduate Teaching Fellowships (GTFs) in the same period; six of these students have secured Research Assistantships (RAs) for the Fall 2009 semester. We have re-cruited five new Dean’s Fellows and eight new GTFs for the Fall 2009 semester.
We received 206 applications for the Fall 2009 semester, up from 191 in Fall 2008, and up from 204 in Fall 2007. We of-fered admission to a total of 95 students; 72 of which were
to the MS program. 15 applicants were offered admission as post-BS PhDs and 8 as post-MS PhDs. This is in comparison to Fall 2008, which had a total of 51 admits with 25 for the MS program, 17 for the post-BS PhD program, and 9 for the post-MS PhD program.
The numbers for the Fall 2009 semester are comparable in volume to previous years. However, while the number of doctoral applicants admitted remains constant in comparison to prior years, the number of MS students admitted has in-creased nearly three-fold from the previous year.
Recruitment
Male Female FT PT GTF RA Fellow DF
MS US 10 4 4 10 0 1 0 0
Intl. 4 3 7 0 0 0 0 0
PHD US 4 1 5 0 4 1 0 1
Intl. 4 0 4 0 2 1 0 1
Total 22 8 20 10 6 3 0 2
Verbal % Quantitative % An. Writing %
MS US 530 68 725 78 4.5 53
Intl. 280 5 783 91 2.5 3
PHD US 560 75 756 85 5.0 70
Intl. 465 50 753 84 4.33 47
Mean 459 50 754 85 4.0 44
Verbal % Quantitative % An. Writing %
MS US 527 66 722 77 4.33 47
Intl. 340 16 675 67 2.75 4.5
PHD US - - - - - -
Intl. - - - - - -
Mean 434 41 699 72 3.5 26
New Matriculants 2008-2009
Fall 2008 Mean GRE Scores
Spring 2009 Mean GRE Scores
2009 Mechanical Engineering Seniors (l)
26 www.bu.edu/me/
Enrol lment by Program
History of PhD Enrollment
History of MS Enrollment
!
44
53
33
35 3431
28
3125
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
MFG
AME* (AME & MFG Merged into ME Fall 2008)
28 32 3425 27 33
2434 31
44
!
1522 21 26
33 35 3443
34
5827
40 37
44
53 47 5045
45
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
MFG
AME*(AME & MFGMerged into ME Fall 2008)
!
44
53
33
35 3431
28
3125
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
MFG
AME* (AME & MFG Merged into ME Fall 2008)
28 32 3425 27 33
2434 31
44
272008-2009 Annual Report
Graduate Student Awards
KEITHE BAGGETT Outstanding Graduate Teaching Fellow Award.
RACHEL DELUCAS Mann Redmayne Award given to a non-corporate member, under 35 years of age, who is the author of the best paper published in the Transactions of the Insti-tute. Awarded to M Suput, U Pal, R Delucas, S Pati, G Ye, and A Powell, for their paper “Solid oxide membrane technology for environmentally sound production of titanium,” Mineral Pro-cessing and Extractive Metallurgy, Vol 117, No 2, pp118-122, July 2008.
KEBIN FAN Photonics Center Berman Future of Light Prize Award, March 2009; Photonics Center Graduate Student Trav-el Award, May 2009; and Photonics Center Senior Research Assistantship Award, 2009-2010.
BENJAMIN HANSEN Best Graduate Thesis Award, sponsored by The Merrill Ebner Fund, May 2009;and NSF Graduate Fel-lowship Award.
BRADLEY KAANTA BU Technology Development Award, March 2008; and BU Nanoscience & Nanotechnology Award, March 2009.
UTKU KEMIKTARAK American Physical Society GIMS travel award.
I-KUAN LIN Best Poster Award for his poster, “Elastic and Viscoelastic Characterization and Modeling of Polymer based Structures for Biological Applications,” at 2008 ASME Interna-tional Mechanical Engineering Congress & Exposition, Novem-ber 2008.
SOOBHANKAR PATI Mann Redmayne Award given to a non-corporate member, under 35 years of age, who is the author of the best paper published in the Transactions of the Insti-tute. Awarded to M Suput, U Pal, R Delucas, S Pati, G Ye, and A Powell, for their paper “Solid oxide membrane technology for environmentally sound production of titanium,” Mineral Pro-cessing and Extractive Metallurgy, Vol 117, No 2, pp118-122, June 2008.
YILING QIU Photonics Center Graduate Student Travel Award, June 2009.
CARLOS RIVAS 2008 NSF Travel Fellowship to attend Interna-tional Conference on Inverse Problems in Engineering, Dour-don, France.
MICHELE SAVERY Clare Boothe Luce Fellowship, presented by the Clare Booth Luce Foundation, the largest source of private funding for women in science, mathematics and engineering.
MARKO SUPUT Mann Redmayne Award given to a non-cor-porate member, under 35 years of age, who is the author of the best paper published in the Transactions of the Institute. Awarded to M Suput, U Pal, R Delucas, S Pati, G Ye, and A Powell, for their paper “Solid oxide membrane technology for environmentally sound production of titanium,” Mineral Pro-cessing and Extractive Metallurgy, Vol 117, No 2, pp118-122, July 2008.
HU “TIGER” TAO Best Poster Award at 2008 Photonics Center Symposium, December 2008.
ZACH WATERS Best Student Paper in Underwater Acoustics and Best Student Paper in Signal Processing at Acoustical Soci-ety of America Meeting in Paris, July 2008.
PEN ZHANG BU/CIMIT Fellowship, awarded to second- or third-year graduate students researching topics that help solve healthcare challenges such as medical device develop-ment, creating algorithms and software for use in clinical prac-tice, and engineering in medical environments.
XIAOYU “RAYNE” ZHENG BU Nanoscience & Nanotechnol-ogy Award, March 2008; Best Poster Award (Third-Place Prize) at 2008 Photonics Center Symposium, December 2008.
Zach Waters
28 www.bu.edu/me/
History of MS Degrees Awarded
History of PhD Degrees Awarded
G r a d u a t e D e g r e e s A w a r d e d
!
12 1419 17
1216
5
2125
3222 26
2321
17
19
19
8
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
MFG
AME*(AME & MFGMerged into ME Fall 2008)
11
!
45
1
43 3
24
54
41
9
4
811
62
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
AME*(AME & MFGMerged into ME Fall 2008)
MFG
292008-2009 Annual Report
C o u r s e s O f f e r e d
Course Number
Course Title Fall 2008 Spring 2009 Summer 2009
ME 500 Special Topics in Mechanical Engineering Gevelber
ME 501 Dynamic System Theory Baillieul
ME 502 Intellectual Assets: Creation, Protection, and Commercialization Cole
ME 503 Kinetic Processes in Materials Basu
ME 504 Polymers and Soft Materials Klapperich
ME 505 Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics Gopalan
ME 507 Process Modeling and Control Gevelber
ME 508 Computational Methods in Materials Science Lin
ME 510 Production Systems Analysis Perkins
ME 514 Simulation for Manufacturing Vakili
ME 515 Vibration of Complex Mechanical Systems Pierce
ME 517 Product Development Hauser
ME 520 Acoustics I Carey
ME 521 Continuum Mechanics for Biomedical Engineers Stamenovic
ME 523 Mechanics of Biomaterials Klapperich
ME 525 Technology Ventures Cole
ME 534 Material Technology for Microelectronics Basu
ME 542 Advanced Fluid Mechanics Howe
ME 545 Electrochemistry of Fuel Cells and Batteries Gopalan Pal
ME 555 MEMS: Fabrication and Materials X. Zhang
ME 560 Precision Machine Design and Instrumentation Sharon
ME 570 Robot Motion Planning Belta
ME 579 Microelectronic Device Manufacturing Cole
ME 580 Theory of Elasticity Barbone
ME 582 Mechanical Behavior of Materials Murray
ME 583 Product Management Hauser
ME 704 Adaptive Control of Dynamic Systems Andersson
ME 706 Acoustics and Aerodynamics Howe
ME 709 Turbulent Flows Yakhot
ME 710 Dynamic Programming and Stochastic Control Caramanis
ME 713 Viscous Flow Grace
ME 714 Advanced Stochastic Modeling and Stimulation Vakili
ME 720 Acoustics II Cleveland
ME 725 Queuing Systems Perkins
ME 726 Biomaterials and Tissue Engineering I Grinstaff
ME 727 Biomaterials and Tissue Engineering II Wong
ME 740 Vision, Robotics and Planning Dupont
ME 762 Non-Linear Control of Mechanical Systems Belta
ME 765 Production System Design Caramanis
30 www.bu.edu/me/
MS Theses and PhD Dissertat ions
PhD Degrees Dissertations
MS Theses
Student Name Dissertation Advisor Dissertation Title
Brideau, Holly Zhang, Katherine
The Inter-Relationship Between MR Diffusion Measures and the Mechanical Status of the Intervertebral Disc
Hansen, Benjamin Zhang, Xin
The Growth and Characterization of Copper (II) Oxide Nanowires with Single Nanowire Electri-cal, Gas Sensing, and Photoconduction Mea-surements
Ormonde, Christopher Roy, RonaldA Flow-Through Acoustic Waveguide for Two-Phase Bubbly Flow Void Fraction Measurement
Sun, Ting Andersson, Sean
Tracking a Single Fluorescent Particle in a Confo-cal Microscope: Source Localization and Control-ler Design
Student Name Dissertation Advisor Dissertation Title
Colosqui, Carlos Yachot, Victor
Theory and Lattice Boltzmann Simulations of Rapidly Oscillating Flows: Application to Nano-fluidics
Foley, Alia Howe, MichaelInvestigations of the Sound Generated by Super-cavity Ventilation
Rivas Aroni, Carlos Barbone, PaulAnalysis of Novel Finite Element Formulations for Iterative Solution of Elastic Inverse Problems
Waters, Zachary Roy, Ronald
Sensing Resonant Objects in the Presence of Noise and Clutter Using Iterative, Single-Channel Acoustic Time Reversal
312008-2009 Annual Report
Distance Learning
The Department of Mechanical Engineering offers a distance learning program (DLP) for a Master’s degree for engineering students. The DLP has been in operation since 1992, originally starting in the Department of Manufacturing Engineering and now continuing in the Department of Mechanical Engineer-ing. This program is historically distinct from many other dis-tance learning programs in that our aim has been to trans-parently extend the reach of our existing on-campus classes, rather than creating different course material for delivery over the internet. Our distance students use videoconferencing to participate in real time interaction with the instructor and with students seated in the on-campus sections.
The program provides Master’s level classes primarily to indus-trial employees wishing to add to their education background, but is open to others if the format suits their needs. DLP courses have included as many as 25 M.S. level courses in the following areas: material science, systems engineering, prod-uct development, advanced manufacturing strategies, and high-tech areas such as micro/nanoelectronics and MEMS/NEMS.
As emphasized by a number of our Industrial Advisory Board members (IAB) in the past, many employees and leaders in the industry involved with creating new high-tech products, do not have the necessary training to mass-produce these products with high yield and low cost. Many are finding the DLP to be an excellent vehicle for providing this information, and for serving as a convenient means for life-long learning of ever-growing technology.
DLP students may participate from anywhere there is a high speed internet connection available to them, in this country or even abroad. Indeed, recently we have had students from as far away as Taiwan, Hawaii, and Mexico. Typically technol-ogy companies sponsor these students. Our DLP classes inte-grate the distance students into the normal on-campus group of graduate students through web based videoconferencing. In this way, both groups hear, see and participate in real time. This mutual participation benefits both groups. On-campus students gain perspective on the real world working environ-ment through the experience of DLP students, and DLP stu-dents benefit by engaging with their on-campus peers and being reminded of the benefits of pursuing higher education.
All students, including the on-campus ones, benefit from the
additional DLP technology in the following way. All class ses-sions are recorded and can be viewed on-line by registered students very soon after the end of class. This feature has con-tinuously improved in quality, flexibility and reliability over the past years. Students who travel, or may need to miss class due to illness or other emergencies, have found this utility extremely useful. Many students also find this feature help-ful when reviewing for tests. We are constantly looking for ways to enhance the usefulness and simplify the use of these recordings. To that end we have been continuing an evalua-tion of Apreso and Echo 360 capture solutions. These provide a number of advantages over our current Real Media platform and we expect to be continuing this evaluation into the new fiscal year.
Since most of the interaction is meant to be in real time, a robust high resolution videoconferencing solution is essential to the operation of the program. Radvision’s “Click to Meet” software has been at the heart of our videoconferencing ca-pability for a few years now. This software enables us to pro-vide learning in real time to DLP students at individual PCs, provided they have an inexpensive camera and microphone and a high speed internet connection. This has been working so successfully that more than one guest lecturer has given his lecture from a distance via this means. This has opened a channel for high profile guest speakers who might be unavail-able due to travel times and busy schedules.
To facilitate web based distribution of class material, the DLP makes an electronic whiteboard available in one of the regular DL classrooms. This is used by professors to generate multi-page PDFs of notes written on the board. These are easily dis-tributed electronically and can be made available on-line after class, at the professor’s discretion.
The DLP continues to play an important role in promoting the department, as it provides important industrial connections and helps to develop key future industrial leaders. Distance learning by Click to Meet permits the department to conduct Masters degree classes concurrently on-campus and at mul-tiple industrial sites with complete two-way video and audio interaction among all locations. Students can participate in class from a variety of locations, including at home, and even at a hotel when traveling. Students can access videos on-line and replay past classes if it is necessary to miss an occasional lecture.
32 www.bu.edu/me/
The DLP committee during the past academic year consisted of:
DAN COLE (chair)
ANDREW ABRAHAMSON
SARAH COWEN (until April 2009)
WILLIAM HAUSER
In total, the DLP offered 11 different courses during the past academic year. A total of 52 individual DLP course enrollments were taken during this period. Four M.S. DLP degrees were awarded. These enrollments permitted talented engineers to remain on the job while earning an advanced technical degree. Most of those receiving M.S. degrees completed their studies in about three years or less. In addition, several other on-cam-pus students who graduated used the DLP to take just a few courses, to help solve the problem of such things as summer internships in industry, but to still pick up a BU course.
Course Number Course Title Fall 2008 Spring 2009 Summer 2009ME 502 Intellectual Assets x
ME 507 Process Model and Control x
ME 510 Production Systems Analysis x
ME 525 Technology Ventures x
ME/MS 534 Materials Technology for Microelectronics x
ME 560 Precision Machine Design and Instrumentation x
ME/EC 579 Microelectronic Device Manufacturing x
ME 580 Manufacturing Strategy x
ME 583 Product Management x
ME 765 Production System Design x
ME 770 Micro-Machined Transducers x
Distance Learning Courses Offered
332008-2009 Annual Report
R E S E A R C H
External Research Funding Administered by the ME Department
RECIPIENT TITLE OF AWARD FUNDING AGENCY
GRANT PERIOD TOTAL FUNDING
Andersson IDBR: Simultaneous tracking of multiple particles in confocal microscopy
NSF 9.1.07-8.31.09 $273,166
Andersson IDBR: Simultaneous tracking of multiple particles in confocal microscopy
NSF 9.1.07-2.28.11 $20,000
Baillieul Behavioral Dynamics in the Cooperative Control of Mixed Human/Robotic Teams, MURI Topic 16, FY 2007 ONR BAA 06-028
DOD/
AFOSR
5.1.07-11.30.12 $7,400,000
Baillieul Sensors & sensor networks in Adverse and Stochastic Environments
NSF 9.1.03-8.31.09 $2,500,000
Basu
Murray
Sarin
FRG: Functionally Graded High-Al Mullite Barrier Coatings
NSF 8.15.03-7.31.08 $640,000
Basu REU Supplement: FRG: Functionally Graded High-Al Mullite Environmental Barrier Coatings
NSF 2.1.04-7.31.08 $12,000
Belta A formal approach to control of hybrid systems NSF 9.15.08-8.31.11 $300,000
Belta Specification Languages & distributed Control Schemes for Teams of Unmanned vehicles
DOD/
Army
1.1.09-12.31.12 $225,000
Belta Formal Verification and Synthesis of control & Communications strategies for teams of unmanned vehicles
AFOSR 1.1.09-12.31.12 $300,000
Belta Scalable Algorithms for Safety Vericication & Reach-ability Analysis of Hybrid systems
NSF 7.1.05-8.31.08 $207,957
Belta REU supplement for career: Hierarchical abstractions for planning and control of robotic swarms
NSF 5.1.09-7.31.09 $24,000
Belta CAREER: Hierarchical abstractions for planning and control of robotic swarms
NSF 7.1.05-1.31.10 $400,000
Bifano Ultraflat Tip Tilt Piston MEMS Deformable Mirror NASA 12.3.06-12.3.08 $102,793
Research Funding
34 www.bu.edu/me/
RECIPIENT TITLE OF AWARD FUNDING AGENCY
GRANT PERIOD TOTAL FUNDING
Carey Autonomous Sensors And Array Processing: The Autonomous Wide Aperture Cluster For Surveillance (AWACS)
ONR 3.1.05-2.28.10 $528,395
Carey
Roy
Sound Speed And Attenuation In Multiphase Media ONR 1.1.04-3.31.11 $1,068,901
Carey ONR Postdoctoral Fellowship Research Proposal for Investigation of Complex Range-dependent Shallow Water Sound Transmission
ONR/ERA 1.1.07-12.31.08 $227,322
Carey
Porter
Sound Speed And Attenuation In Muddy Sediments ONR/ERA 2.22.07-11.30.09 $164,074
Carey Speed And Attenuation In Multiphase Media ONR/ERA 1.1.04-3.31.11 $826,681
Carey Sound Speed And Attenuation In Muddy Sediments ONR/ERA 1.1.04-3.31.11 $1,068,901
Cleveland The Structural Basis of Kidney Stone Fragility NIH-DDK sub with Indiana Univ.
9.1.08-8.31.09 $444,127
Cleveland
Roy
CDI: Full fidelity numerical simulation of ultrasonic-wave propagation in the human body
NSF sub with Caltech
10.1.08-9.30.12 $488,500
Dupont Image-guided Intracardiac Beating Heart Surgery - Competitive Renewal
NIH Children’s Hospital prime
7.1.08-5.31.09 $1,146,016
Dupont Sterable Mems Inst. for precise intracardiac surgery NHLBI 8.1.07-4.30.12 $4,971,935
Ekinci NIST “IPA Agreement” NIST
US Commerce Dept.
9.1.08-08.31.09 $110,160
Ekinci
Yakhot
High-Frequency Nanofluidics of Bio-NEMS: Theory and Experiments
NSF 6.15.08-5.31.11 $240,000
Ekinci Lincoln Labs Scholar Program, Graduate student sup-port for Carl Hart
Lincoln Labs 7.1.08-4.30.09 $15,299
Ekinci CAREER: Photonic Integration of Nanoelectrome-chanical Systems
NSF 3.1.2007-2.28.10 $400,000
Gevelber Real-Time Control for Engineering Electrospun Nanofiber Diameter Distributions for Advanced Ap-plications
NSF 9.1.08-8.31.11 $224,100
Gevelber SBIR/STTR Phase II: Advanced Control of Electron Beam Deposition for High Precision Optical Coatings
Cyber Materials LLC/NSF STTR program
4.15.06-4.30.09 $171,941
352008-2009 Annual Report
RECIPIENT TITLE OF AWARD FUNDING AGENCY
GRANT PERIOD TOTAL FUNDING
Gopalan
Pal
Basu
Ludwig
Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Cathodes: Unraveling The Rela-tionship Between Structure, Surface Chemistry And Oxygen Reduction
NETL 9.1.08-9.30.11 $450,001
Gopalan Advanced Cathode Materials for Solid Oxide Electro-lyzers
San Diego State Univ. Founda-tions
3.1.05-7.31.08 $75,000
Gopalan
Pal
MIEC membranes for Hydrogen Generation & Sepa-ration
Other Corp. 3.1.06-2.28.09 $136,785
Holt Laser Nucleation And Collapse Stability For Advanced Cavitation Power Technology (ACPT): Year 1
US Army SMDC 2.18.2008-6.28.09 $945,000
Howe Sound sources of phonation UCLA Medical School - NIH/NIDCD
12.1.2007-11.30.09 $168,000
Howe The self noise from ventilated supercavities ONR/ERA 12.12.05-5.30.09 $210,000
Lin Conjugated polymer solvent affinity and ion-solvent channel design
Educational Inst.
1.1.08-12.31.09 $365,099
McDaniel Estimating damping effectiveness in complex struc-tures
ONR 2.7.08-4.30.11 $351,216
McDaniel Steering and mixing waves in structures with aniso-tropic layers
ONR 12.1.04-12.31.08 $261,712
Morgan Collaborative Research: Micro- and Nano-scale Char-acterization and Modeling of Bone Tissue
NSF-CMMI 9.1.08-8.31.11 $67,940
Morgan
Barbone
3-D Visualization and Prediction of Spine Fractures NIH-NIAMS 4.8.08-4.30.13 $1,607,356
Morgan Inducing Skeletal Repair by Mechanical Stimulation NIAMS 9.26.05-8.31.10 $1,156,200
Morgan Prevention of Femoral head deformity Medical 1.1.07-12.31.08 $11,374
Murray CAREER: Integrated research and education in nano- and microscale photoacoustic and photothermal microscopy
NSF 5.1.05-4.30.10 $400,000
Nagem Low Drag Underwater Acoustic Source KaZaK
Composites/ONR
12.7.06-7.6.08 $123,555
Nagem Mine Sweeping Pressure Detonator KaZaK Compos-ites/ONR
7.20.07-2.2.09 $21,000
Pal Solid Oxide Membrane Electrolyzer for the produc-tion of pure hydrogen and syn-gas from a source of waste and steam
Educational Inst.
9.1.08-8.31.09 $40,000
36 www.bu.edu/me/
RECIPIENT TITLE OF AWARD FUNDING AGENCY
GRANT PERIOD TOTAL FUNDING
Pal
Gopalan
Basu
Hybrid Processing Of Planar Intermediate Tempera-ture Solids Oxide Fuel Cells
BTU Interna-tional
9.1.05-8.31.08 $517,267
Roy
Holt
Cleveland
R&D Mitigation of Cavitation Damage: Task 1-3 DoE 10.5.06-9.30.09 $1,023,387
Roy
Holt
Detection and Identification of Buried Targets Using Time Reversal Acoustics: Student Support
ONR/ERA 1.1.06-8.31.09 $213,331
Roy Detection and Identification of Buried Targets Using Time Reversal Acoustics: Student Support
ONR/ERA 1.1.08-12.31.08 $50,000
Sarin Novel Ceramic Scintillators for PET DOE
sub with RMD/Alem
8.15.08-8.14.10 $100,000
Sarin Optical Ceramic Hafnates: New Fast PET Scintillators NIGMS 9.1.05-8.31.09 $160,000
Sarin A New Ceramic Scintillator for Neutron Detection DOE 7.11.05-7.10.08 $123,759
Sarin Fast, Dense, Low Cost Scintallators for Nuclear Phys-ics
DOE 8.7.06-08.06.09 $140,000
Sarin Superior Medical Scintillator by Vapor Deposition (II) NIBIB 5.1.06-4.30.09 $436,409
Vakili New Strategies for Efficient Monte Carlo Simulation NSF 7.15.06-8.31.09 $256,243
Wang Adaptive Fuzzy Control for Modified F-15 NASA 7.17.08-7.16.09 $30,000
Wroblewski STTR Phase II: Plasma Spray Experiments in Support of Development of Sensor and Advanced Control for Plasma Spray
NSF sub with Cyber Materials
8.1.07-7.31.09 $180,123
Zhang K Clare Boothe Luce Professorship The Henry Luce Foundation
1.1.06-12.31.10 $427,377
Zhang K Micro and nano-Mechanics of Thin Film and Thin Film Coatings
DARPA/
MTO
4.25.07-4.24.09 $149,905
Zhang K
Zhang X
Wong
Multiscale approach to Understanding the Mechani-cal and Biochemical Behavior of Tissue Engineering Blood Vessels
NSF 6.1.07-5.31.09 $75,000
Zhang K Multiscale approach to Understanding the Mechani-cal and Biochemical Behavior of Tissue Engineering Blood Vessels (REU)
NSF 6.1.07-5.31.09 $6,950
372008-2009 Annual Report
RECIPIENT TITLE OF AWARD FUNDING AGENCY
GRANT PERIOD TOTAL FUNDING
Zhang X Development of a Novel Optomechanical Uncooled Metamaterial-Enhanced Active Terahertz Detection Imager
NSF 7.1.08-6.30.11 $259,699
Zhang X Collaborative Research: Elastic and Viscoelastic Characterization and Modeling of Polymer Based Structures for Biological Applications
NSF 9.1.08-8.31.11 $297,969
Zhang X Design, Fabrication and Characterization of an HT microTCD
Schlumberger 6.1.08-6.30.10 $20,000
Zhang X CAREER: Creating Nanostructured Gratings on Micro-structures for Residual Strain/Stress Measurement in NEMS/MEMS and Traction Force Measurement in Cells
NSF 3.1.03-08.31.09 $400,000
Zhang X CAREER: Creating Nanostructured Gratings on Micro-structures for Residual Strain/Stress Measurement in NEMS/MEMS and Traction Force Measurement in Cells
NSF 2.13.04-8.31.09 $48,000
Zhang X NER: A Digital Bio/Nanoelectronics Interface for Single Cell Study
NSF 9.15.06-11.30.08 $100,000
Zhang X NER: A Digital Bio/Nanoelectronics Interface for Single Cell Study (REU Supplement)
NSF 8.9.07-11.30.08 $6,000
Zhang X Mechanical Behavior of Amorphous Plasma-En-hanced Chemical Vapor Deposited Silicon Oxide Films for MEMS Applications
NSF 6.1.07-5.31.10 $150,000
Zhang X Uncooled Cantilever Microbolometer Focal Plane Arrays with mK Temperature Resolution: Engineering Mechanics for the Next Generation
AFSOR 4.1.06-9.30.09 $298,902
Zhang X Development of MEMS Column Using SOI Wafers Schlumberger 6.1.08-6.30.09 $20,000
Zhang X Development of MEMS Column Using SOI Wafers Schlumberger 7.23.07-09.30.08 $24,571
Total External Research Funding: $36,138,840
38 www.bu.edu/me/
RECIPIENT TITLE OF AWARD FUNDING AGENCY FUNDING TO DATE
Barbone Analysis and computational solution of an inverse elasticity problem arising from medical imaging
US-Israel BSF $480,000
Bifano Collaborative research: Center of Biopotonic sensors and systems
DOD/Army $19,999
Bifano High subcontract from BMC NSF $93,432
Cleveland Role of shock generation and stone mechanics in SWL NIH-DDK $129,590
Dupont Development of a Surgical Instrument for Minimally Invasive Beating Heart Patent Foramen Ovale (PFO) Closure
Wallace H. Coulter Translational Partner-ship
$100,000
Klapperich Agilent University relations grant: sample technology for MRNA Isolation
MRNA Isolation $40,000
Klapperich Compact Optical Biothreat Analyzer ARL $50,000
Klapperich Downhole Li-ion Batteries based on Network Ionic liquids for powering Micro & Nanosensors
AEC $750,000
Klapperich Microchip to detect influenza infection ad Type in Nasopha-ryngeal swabs
NIH-NIBIB $1,409,026
Klapperich Microfluidic system for monitoring sepsis at the point of care CIMIT $140,000
Klapperich NRSA: Eng. A Basement membrane to prolong chick hair cell viability in vitro
NIH/NIBIB $60,848
Klapperich Integrated Microfluidic platform for detection and diagnosis of avian influenza
CIMIT $138,975
Klapperich Microfluidic cell Lysis and Nucleic acid Isolation for Point of care detection of C. Difficile
Wallace H. Coulter Foundation
$50,000
Klapperich Portable low Power Nucleic Acid extraction Module (PATH) NIH $280,003
Klapperich Agilent University relations grant for good sample prepara-tion module
Agilent Technologies $80,000
Roy
Cleveland
The utilization of the Analogic ultrasound imaging Engine and the Terason system 2000 in API
NSF $1,023,387
RoyCleveland
Quantitative Ultrasound Imaging and Coral Imaging CenSSIS Ind. $112,519
Roy
Cleveland
An ERC for sub-Surface sensing and Imaging systems:R1 acoustics thrust
NSF (N.E.) $742,702
Sharon Process Automation for plant based pharmaceuticals FHCMB/Darpa $2,952,000
Sharon BU-Frunhofer alliance for medical devices, Instrum. & diag-nostics
Fraunhofer $2,500,000
Zhang X Metamaterial Enhanced terahertz Imager DOD/Army $100,378
Zhang X Materials MEMS components for Spectroscopic detection and Identification using Terahertz radiation
DOD/Army $150,004
Funding Administered Outside Mechanical Engineering Department for Which an ME Professor Serves as Principal Investigator of the Grant or Subcontract
392008-2009 Annual Report
RECIPIENT TITLE OF AWARD FUNDING AGENCY FUNDING TO DATE
Baillieul Communication complexity Hong Kong govern-ment
$480,000
Barbone Feasibility of in vivo determination of absolute elastic tissue properties in 3D
NIH-NCI $490,350
Barbone Biomechanical Imaging NSF $60,000
Caramanis Multidisciplinary Approach to the integration of high perfor-mance computing in science foundation
NSF $2,670,000
Cleveland Ultrasonic Image Guidance for HIFU cancer treatment NIH/Tufts $46,930
Grace Win: Women in Networks Building Community and Gaining Voice
NSF $742,702
Klapperich Compact Optical Biothreat Analyzer ARL $50,000
Klapperich Downhole Li-ion Batteries based on Network Ionic liquids for powering Micro & Nanosensors
AEC $750,000
Klapperich NRSA: Eng. A Basement membrane to prolong chick hair cell viability in vitro
NIH/NIBIB $60,848
Morgan Molecular Mechanisms of Skeletal Repair NIH $5,529,749
Vakili Final Stage Optimization Methods for Protein Docking:Exploiting translational and rotaional Funnels
NIH $437,852
Zhang X Role of Neuregulin/erbB Signaling NIH $2,012,500
RECIPIENT TITLE OF AWARD FUNDING AGENCY FUNDING TO DATE
Zhang X Material & Mechanics of MEMS for Terahertz Technology AFOSR $520,000
Total Funding Administered Outside ME: $11,456,057
Funding Administered Outside Mechanical Engineering Department for Which an ME Professor Serves as Co-Principal Investigator of the Grant or Subcontract
Total: $13,330,931
40 www.bu.edu/me/
F a c u l t y P u b l i c a t i o n sB O O K S
B O O K C H A P T E R S
P. BARBONE and Assad A. Oberai, “A review of the mathematical and compu-tational foundations of biomechanical imaging,” in Computational Methods in Biomechanics, edited by Suvranu De, Springer, 2008.
L. Dal Negro, R. Li, J. Warga, S. Yerci, S.N. BASU, S. Hamel, and G. Galli, “Light Emission from Silicon-Rich Nitride Nanostructures,” in Silicon Nanophotonics: Basic principles, Present Status and Perspectives, edited by L. Khriachtchev, Pan Stanford Publishing, 2008.
B. Yordanov and C. BELTA, “Parameter synthesis for piecewise affine systems from temporal logic specifications,” in Lecture Notes in Computer Science, eds. M. Egerstedt and B. Mishra, vol. 4981, pp. 542-555, Springer, 2008.
M. Kloetzer and C. BELTA, “Dealing with non-determinism in symbolic con-trol,” Lecture Notes in Computer Science, eds. M. Egerstedt and B. Mishra, vol. 4981, pp. 287-300, Springer, 2008.
C. BELTA, “Robot Motion Planning,” Wiley Encyclopedia of Computer Science and Engineering, ed. Benjamin Wah, vol. 4, pp. 2439-2446, John Wiley & Sons, Inc, Hoboken, 2009.
J.E. Lingeman, D. Beiko, R.O. CLEVELAND, M.T. Gettman, K. U. Kohrmann, E. Liatsikos, B.R. Matlaga, J.A. McAteer, M. Monga, G. Tailly, A. Timoney, “Stone Technology: Shock Wave and Intracorporeal Lithotripsy” in Stone Disease 2nd International Consultation on Stone Disease, J.D. Denstedt and S. Khoury Eds., pp. 85-135, Editions 21, Paris, France, 2008.
A. Bhattacharyya and C.M. KLAPPERICH, “On-Chip Cell Lysis”, in Encyclopedia of Micro- and Nano-Fluidics, Dongqing Li, editor, 2226 p., Springer, 2008.
E.F. MORGAN and M.L. Bouxsein, “Biomechanics of Bone and Age-Related Fractures,” in Principles of Bone Biology, 3rd edition, J.P. Bilezikian, L.G. Raisz, J. Martin, editors, p. 26-40, Boston, Elsevier Academic Press, 2008.
E.F. MORGAN, G.L. Barnes, T.A. Einhorn, “The Bone Organ System: Form and Function,” in Osteoporosis, 3rd edition, R. Marcus, D. Feldman, D. Nelson, C.J. Rosen, editors, p. 3-25, Boston, Elsevier Academic Press, 2008.
T.W. MURRAY, R.A. ROY, and R.G. HOLT, “Laser-Ultrasonic Cavita-tion,” in the McGraw Hill Yearbook of Science and Technology, Mc-Graw Hill, New York, 190-193, 2008.
S. ATTAWAY, MATLAB, A Practical Intro-duction To Programming And Problem Solving, pp.452+x, Burlington, MA, Else-vier Inc, 2009.
J. BETHUNE, Engineering Design and Graphics with AutoCAD 2009, pp.737+x, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, Pearson Education Inc, 2009.
J. BETHUNE, Engineering Design and Graphics with Autodesk Inventor 2009, pp.704+x, Upper Saddle River, New Jer-sey, Pearson Education Inc, 2009.
J. BETHUNE, Engineering Design and Graph-ics with SolidWorks, pp.532+x, Columbus, Ohio, Prentice Hall, Pearson Education Inc, 2009.
M.S. HOWE, Acoustics of Fluid Structure Interactions, pp.560+x. Cambridge Mono-graphs on Mechanics, Cambridge University Press, 2008.
R.J. NAGEM and G. Sandri, Annotated translation of The Theory of the Top, Vol. I, pp.279+x, by Felix Klein and Arnold Sommer-
feld, Boston MA, Birkhauser Verlag, 2008.
412008-2009 Annual Report
D. Perrin, N. Vasilyev, P. Novotny, J. Stoll, R. Howe, P. DUPONT, I. Salgo, P. del Nido, “Image Guided Surgical Interventions,” in Current
Problems in Surgery, Wells S, editor, Mosby, Inc., 2008.
S.B. ANDERSSON, “Discretization of a continuous curve,” IEEE Trans-actions on Robotics, vol. 24, no 4, pp. 456-461, 2008.
S.B. ANDERSSON, “Localization of a fluorescent source without nu-merical fitting,” Optics Express, vol. 16, no. 23, pp.18714-18724, 2008.
W.S. Wong and J. BAILLIEUL, “Control Communication Complexity of Nonlinear Systems,’’ Communications in Information and Systems, Special Issue on the Legacy of Roger W. Brockett, Vol. 9, No. 1, pp. 103-140, 2009.
J. BAILLIEUL, “CDC/CCC 2009---A Shanghai Journey,’’ IEEE Control Sys-tems Magazine, Vol. 29, Issue 3, pp. 119-130, June, 2009.
F.A. Cruz and L.A. BARBA, “Characterization of the accuracy of the fast multipole method in particle simulations,” Int. J. Num. Meth. En-grg., doi:10.1002/nme.2611, 2009.
C.E. Torres and L.A. BARBA, “Fast radial basis function interpola-tion with Gaussians by localization and iteration,” J. Comput. Phys., 228,14, pp. 4976-4999, 2009.
U. Albocher, A.A. Oberai, P.E. BARBONE, I. Harari, “Adjoint-weight-ed equation for inverse problems of incompressible plane-stress elasticity,” Computer Methods Applied Mechanics and Engineering, doi:10.1016/j.cma.2009.02.034, 2009.
M.S. Richards, P.E. BARBONE, and A.A. Oberai, “Quantitative three dimensional elasticity imaging from quasi-static deformation: a phan-tom study” Phys. Med. Biol., 54, pp. 757-779, 2009.
A.A. Oberai, N.H. G.S. Goenezen, P.E. BARBONE, T.J. Hall, A.M. Som-mer, J. Jiang, “Linear and Nonlinear elasticity imaging of soft tissue in-vivo: Demonstration of feasibility,” Phys. Med. Biol., 54 pp. 1191–1207, 2009.
A.A. Oberai, G.R. Feijoo, P.E. BARBONE, “Lanczos iterated time-rever-sal,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am. Express Letters, 125 (2), February 2009.
N.H. Gokhale, A.A. Oberai, P.E. BARBONE, “Solution of the non-linear elasticity imaging inverse problem: the compressible case,” Inverse
Problems, 24(4), August 2008.
S.N. BASU, T. Kulkarni, H.Z. WANG and V.K. SARIN, “Functionally Graded Chemical Vapor Deposited Mullite Environmental Barrier Coatings for Si-Based Ceramics”, The Journal of the European Ceramic Society, 28, pp. 437-445, 2008.
J. Warga, R. Li, S.N. BASU, and L. Dal Negro, “Electroluminescence from Silicon-Rich Nitride/Silicon superlattice structures,” Applied Physics Letters, 93 [15], 151116, 2008.
L. Dal Negro, R. Li, J. Warga, S.N. BASU, “Sensitized Erbium Emission from Erbium-Doped Silicon-Rich Nitride/Silicon Superlattice Struc-tures,” Applied Physics Letters, 92 [18] 181105, 2008.
L. Sirleto, M.A. Ferrara, I. Rendina, J. Warga, R. Li, L. Dal Negro, and S.N. BASU, “Enhanced Stimulated Raman Scattering in Silion Nano-crystals Embedded in Silicon-Rich Nitride/Silicon Superlattice Struc-tures,” Applied Physics Letters, 93, 251104, 2008.
S.N. BASU, G. Ye, R. Khare, B. McCandless, M. GEVELBER, and D. WROBLEWSKI, “Dependence of Substrate Remelt and Stress Evolu-tion on Surface Roughness Length Scales in Plasma Sprayed Thermal Barrier Coatings,” International Journal of Refractory Metals and Hard Materials, 27 [2], pp. 479-484, 2009.
T. Kulkarni, H.Z. Wang, S.N. BASU and V.K. SARIN, “Phase Transfor-mations in Mullite Based Nanocomposites,” International Journal of Refractory Metals and Hard Materials, 27 [2], pp. 465-471, 2009.
T. Kulkarni, H.Z. Wang, S.N. BASU and V.K. SARIN, “Compositionally graded mullite based CVD coatings,” J. Materials Research, 24 [2], pp. 470-474, 2009.
J. Warga, R. Li, S.N. BASU, and L. Dal Negro, “Erbium-Doped Silicon Nanocrystals in Silicon/Silicon Nitride Superlattice Structures: Light Emission and Energy Transfer”, Physica E – 41 [6], pp. 1040-1043, 2009.
M. Imielinski and C. BELTA, “Exploiting the pathway structure of me-tabolism to reveal high-order epistasis,” BMC Systems Biology, 2:40, 2008.
M. Kloetzer and C. BELTA, “A fully automated framework for control of linear systems from temporal logic specifications,” IEEE Transac-tions on Automatic Control, vol. 53, no. 1, pp. 287-297, 2008.
G. Batt, C. BELTA, and R. Weiss, “Temporal logic analysis of gene net-works under parameter uncertainty,” IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, vol.53, no. 1, pp. 215-229, 2008.
A. Diouf, G. Reimann, and T. BIFANO, “Fabrication of implant-able microshunt using a novel channel sealing technique,” Jour-nal of Micro-Nanolithography Mems and Moems, vol. 7, no. 3, DOI:10.1117/1.2955935, 2008.
O.M. Anli, M.C. CARAMANIS, I.C. Paschalidis “Tractable Supply Chain Production Planning Modeling Non-Linear Lead Time and Quality of Service Constraints,” Journal of Manufacturing Systems, doi:10.1016/j.jmsy.2008.05.001,, 2008.
W.M. CAREY, A.D. PIERCE, R.E. Evans, and J.D. Holmes, “On the ex-ponent in the power law for the attenuation at low frequencies in sandy sediments,” J. Acoust. Soc, Am., Vol. 124, Issue 5, pp. EL271-EL277, November 2008.
B.U. Karbeyaz, E.L. Miller and R.O. CLEVELAND, “Shape Based Ultra-sound Tomography for Detection of HIFU Lesions,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am, 123: 2994-2956, 2008.
R.O. CLEVELAND, P.V. Chitnis, S.R. McClure, “Reply to Shock Wave Therapy: What Really Matters,” Ultrasound Med. Biol. 34:1869-1870, 2008.
M O N O G R A P H
J O U R N A L A R T I C L E S
42 www.bu.edu/me/
D.C. COLE and Y. Zou, “Subharmonic resonance behavior for the clas-sical hydrogen atomic system,” Journal of Scientific Computing, Vol-ume 39, Number 1, April 2009.
K.L. EKINCI, D.M. Karabacak and V. YAKHOT, “Universality in Oscil-lating Flows,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 101, 264501, 2008.
K.L. EKINCI, “All You Need is Feedback,” Nature Nanotechnology 3, 319, 2008.
K.J. Yoon, S. GOPALAN, and U.B. PAL, “Analysis of Electrochemical Performance of Solid Oxide Fuel Cells Using Polarization Modelling and Impedance Spectroscopy,” J. Electrochemical Society, vol. 156 (3), p. B311-B317, 2009.
W. Huang, S. GOPALAN, U.B. PAL, and S.N. BASU, “Evaluation of Electrophoretically Deposited CuMn1.8O4 Spinel Coatings on Crofer 22 APU for Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Interconnects,” Journal of the Electro-chemical Society, 155 [11] B1161, 2008.
K.J. Yoon, S. GOPALAN, and U.B. PAL, “Effect of Anode Active Layer on Performance of Single Step Co-fired Solid Oxide Fuel Cells at High Fuel Utilizations,” J. Electrochemical Society, vol. 155 (6), p. B610, 2008.
S.M. GRACE, E. Quaranta, B. Shinn-Cunningham and H.F. Voigt, “Sim-ulation of the binaural environmental transfer function for gerbils us-ing a boundary element method,” Acta Acustica United with Acustica, 94:310-320, 2008.
R. Georgescu, D. Khismatullin, R.G. HOLT, J.L. Castagner, O. A’amar, I.J. Bigio, “Design of a system to measure light scattering from indi-vidual cells excited by an acoustic wave,” Optics Express, 16 (6), p. 3496, 2008.
C.H. Farny, R.G. HOLT, and R.A. ROY, “Temporal and spatial detec-tion of HIFU-induced inertial and hot-vapor cavitation with a diag-nostic ultrasound system,” Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology, 35(4):603-15, Apr 2009.
M.S. HOWE, A. Winslow and M. Iida, “Rapid calculation of the com-pression wave generated by a train entering a tunnel with a vented hood. Part 2: Short hoods,” Journal of Sound and Vibration, Volume 311, pp. 254 - 268, 2008.
M.S. HOWE, “Sound produced by a vortex ring interacting with an aperture of variable radius,” International Journal of Aeroacoustics, Volume 7, pp.123 - 122, 2008.
M.S. HOWE, M. Iida and T. Miyachi, “Sound produced by forced flow through a baffled aperture, with application to compression wave generation in a tunnel,” Journal of Fluids and Structures, published online: doi:10.1016/j.fluidstructs.2008.06.002, 2008.
A. Manela and M.S. HOWE, “On the stability and sound of an un-forced flag,” Journal of Sound and Vibration, published online: doi:10.1016/j.jsv.2008.10.009, 2008.
M.S. HOWE, “Rayleigh Lecture 2007: Flow-surface interaction noise,” Journal of Sound and Vibration, Volume 314, 113 - 146, 2008.
A.W. Foley, M.S. HOWE and T. A. Brungart, “Sound generated by a jet-excited spherical cavity,” Journal of Sound and Vibration, Volume 315, 88 - 99, 2008.
M.S. HOWE, A. Colgan and T.A. Brungart, “On self noise at the nose of a supercavitating vehicle,” Journal of Sound and Vibration, pub-lished online: doi:10.1016/j.jsv.2008.11.019, 2008.
A. Sauer-Budge, P. Mirer, A. Chatterjee, C.M. KLAPPERICH, D. Chargin, and A. SHARON, “Low cost and Manufacturable Complete MicroTAS for Detecting Bacteria” Lab on a Chip 2009,doi:10.1039/B904854E.
A. Bhattacharyya, and C.M. KLAPPERICH, ”Microfluidics -Based Ex-traction of Viral RNA for Disposable Molecular Diagnostics, “ Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical, 129, pp. 693–698, 2008.
N.J. Spencer, D. Cotanche, and C.M. KLAPPERICH, “Peptide and col-lagen based hydrogel substrates for in vitro culture of chick cochle-ae,” Biomaterials, Volume 29 (8), pp. 1028-1042, 2008.
C.M. KLAPPERICH, C.L. Noack, J.D. Kaufman, L. Zhu, Bonnaillie, and R.P. Wool, “A novel biocompatible adhesive incorporating plant-derived monomers,” Journal of Biomedical Materials Research A, DOI:10.1002/jbm.a.32250, 2008.
J.D. Kaufman, and C.M. KLAPPERICH, “Surface detection errors cause overestimation of the modulus in nanoindentation on soft ma-terials,” Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials, DOI: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2008.08.004, 2008.
S. Gillers, C.D. Atkinson, A.C. Bartoo, M. Mahalanabis, M.O. Boylan, J.H. Schwartz, C.M. KLAPPERICH, and S.K. Singh, “Microscale sample preparation for PCR of C. difficile infected stool,” Journal of Microbio-logical Methods, doi:10.1016/j.mimet.2009.05.020, 2009.
M. Mahalanabis, H. Al-Muayad, M. D. Kulinski, D. Altman and C.M. KLAPPERICH, “Cell lysis and DNA extraction of Gram-positive and Gram-negative Bacteria from Whole Blood in a Disposable Microflu-idic Chip”, Lab on a Chip, doi: 10.1039/B905065P, 2009.
T.T. Lau, X. LIN, Y. Sidney, and K. Van Vleit, “Atomistic examination of the unit processes and vacancy-dislocation interaction in dislocation climb,” Scripta Materialia, 60 (6), pp. 399-402, March 2009.
T.L. Poole, G.V. Frisk, J.F. LYNCH, and A.D. PIERCE, “Geoacoustic in-version by mode amplitude perturbation,” J. Acoust. Soc, Am., Vol. 123, Issue 2, pp. 667—678, February 2008.
M.S. Caldwell, J.G. MCDANIEL, and K.M. Warkentin, “Frequency information in the vibration-cued escape hatching of red-eyed tree-frogs,” The Journal of Experimental Biology, Vol. 212, Pt. 4, pp. 566-575, February 2009.
P.L. Leong and E.F. MORGAN, “Correlations between indentation modulus and mineral density in bone-fracture calluses,” Integrative and Comparative Biology Advance Access, Integr. Comp. Biol. 2009 49: 59-68; doi:10.1093/icb/icp024, May 2009.
A.V. Cuomo, M. Virk, F. Petrigliano, E.F. MORGAN, and J.R. Lieber-man, “Mesenchymal stem cell concentration and bone repair: poten-tial pitfalls from bench to bedside,” J Bone Joint Surg Am., 91(5):1073-83, May 2009.
M.V. Bais, N. Wigner, M. Young, R. Toholka, D.T. Graves, E.F. MOR-GAN, L.C. Gerstenfeld, and T.A. Einhorn, “BMP2 is essential for post natal osteogenesis but not for recruitment of osteogenic stem cells,” Bone. 2009 Aug;45(2):254-66, Epub 3 May 2009.
432008-2009 Annual Report
H.K. Kim, H. Bian, J. Aya-ay, A. Garces, E.F. MORGAN, and S.R. Gil-bert, “Hypoxia and HIF-1alpha expression in the epiphyseal cartilage following ischemic injury to the immature femoral head,” Bone, 2009 Aug;45(2):280-8. Epub 5 April 2009.
T. Gaur, J.J. Wixted, S. Hussain, S. O’Connel, E.F. MORGAN, D. Ayers, B.S. Komm, P.V. Bodine, G.S. Stein, and J.B. Lian, “Secreted frizzled related protein 1 is a target to improve fracture healing,” Journal of Cellular Physiology, 220(1): 174-181, 2009.
D.J. Hunter, L.C. Gerstenfeld, G. Bishop, Z.D. Mason, T.A. Einhorn, R.A. Maciewicz, P. Newham, and E.F. MORGAN, “Bone marrow lesions from osteoarthritic knees are characterized by sclerotic bone that is less well mineralized,” Arthritis Research, 11(1): R11, 2009.
K.T. Salisbury Palomares, R.E. Gleason, Z.D. Mason, D.M. Cullinane, T.A. Einhorn, L.C. Gerstenfeld, and E.F. MORGAN, “Mechanical stim-ulation alters tissue differentiation and molecular expression during bone healing,” Journal of Orthopaedic Research, February 2009.
L.N.M. Hayward, and E.F. MORGAN, “Assessment of a mechano-reg-ulation theory of skeletal tissue differentiation in an in vivo model of mechanically induced cartilage formation,” Biomechanics and Mod-eling in Mechanobiology, doi:10.1007/s10237-009-0148-3, January 2009.
L.C. Gerstenfeld, D.J. Sacks, M. Pelis, Z.D. Mason, D.T. Graves, M. Bar-rero, M. Ominsky, P.J. Kostenuik, E.F. MORGAN, and T.A. Einhorn, “Comparison of bisphosphonate alendronate versus the RANKL in-hibitor denosumab on murine fracture healing,” Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, 24(2). 196-208, 2009.
E.F. MORGAN, K.B. Chien, Z.D. Mason, A.J. Pfeiffer, G.L. Barnes, T.A. Einhorn, and L.C. Gerstenfeld, “Computed tomography assessment of fracture healing: relationships among callus structure, composition, and mechanical function,” Bone, 44(2), 335-344, 2008.
E.F. MORGAN, Z.D. Mason, G. Bishop, A.D. Davis, L.C. Gerstenfeld, T.A. Einhorn, “Combined effects of recombinant human BMP-7 (rh-BMP-7) and parathyroid hormone (1-34) in metaphyseal bone heal-ing,” Bone, 43(6):1031-8, 2008.
P.L. Leong and E.F. MORGAN, “Measurement of fracture callus mate-rial properties via nanoindentation,” Acta Biomaterialia, 4(5):1569-1575, 2008.
J.D. Kaufman, G.E. Miller, E.F. MORGAN, and C.M. KLAPPERICH, “Time-dependent mechanical characterization of poly(2-hydroxy-ethyl methacrylate) hydrogels using nanoindentation and confined compression,” Journal of Materials Research, 23(5):1472-1481, 2008.
K.A. Jacobsen, Z.S. Alaql, J. Fitch, Z.D. Mason, R.M. Cole, S.R. Gilbert, T.L. Clemens, E.F. MORGAN, T.A. Einhorn, and L.C. Gerstenfeld, “Bone formation during distraction osteogenesis is dependent on both VEGFR1 and VEGFR2 signaling,” Journal of Bone and Mineral Re-search, 23(5); 596-609, 2008.
E.F. MORGAN, R.E. Gleason, P.L. Leong, L.N. Hayward, and K.T. Salis-bury Palomares, “Mechanotransduction and fracture repair,” Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 90(2):S25-90, 2008.
G.R. Houtchens, M.D. Foster, T.A. Desai, E.F. MORGAN, and J.Y. Wong, “Combined effects of microtopography and cyclic strain on vascular smooth muscle cell orientation,” Journal of Biomechanics, 41(4): 762-9, 2008.
G.L. Barnes, S. Kakar, S, Vora, E.F. MORGAN, L.C. Gerstenfeld, and T.A. Einhorn, “Stimulation of fracture healing with systemic intermit-tent parathyroid hormone treatment,” Journal of Bone and Joint Sur-gery, 90(Suppl 1): 120-7, 2008.
S. Bramhavar, B. Pouet, and T.W. MURRAY, “Superheterodyne detec-tion of laser generated acoustic waves,” Applied Physics Letters, Vol. 94, p. 114102, 2009.
R.J. NAGEM, G. Sandri, D. Uminsky, and C.E. Wayne, ”Generalized Helmholtz–Kirchhoff Model for Two-Dimensional Distributed Vortex Motion,’’ SIAM Journal on Applied Dynamical Systems, Volume 8, Is-sue 1, pp. 160-179, 2009.
U.B. PAL, “A Lower Carbon Foot Print Process for Production of Met-als from their Oxide Sources,” J. of Metals, 60(2), p. 36, 2008.
M. Suput,, R. Delucas, S. Pati, G. Ye, U.B. PAL, A.C. Powell IV, “Solid Oxide Membrane Technology for Environmentally Sound Production of Titanium,” Mineral Processing and Extractive Metallurgy, vol. 117, (2), p 118, 2008.
K.J. Yoon, P.A. Zink, S. GOPALAN, U.B. PAL, and L.R. Pederson, “De-fect Chemistry and Electrical Properties of (La0.8Ca0.2)0.95FeO3 ”, J. Electrochemical Society, vol. 156 (7), p. B795, 2009.
A.D. PIERCE and W.M. CAREY, “Low-frequency attenuation of acoustic waves in sandy/silty marine sediments,” J. Acoust. Soc, Am., Vol. 124, No. 5, pp. EL308-EL312, November 2008.
A.D. PIERCE, “Derivation of Maxwell’s equations via the covariance requirements of the special theory of relativity, starting with New-ton’s laws,” ArXiv, paper arXiv:0807.2557v1 [physics.class-ph], post-ed online http://arxiv.org/abs/0807.2557v1, July 2008.
P.S. Wilson, and R.A. ROY, “An audible demonstration of the sound speed in bubbly liquids,” American Institute of Physics 76(10), 975-981, 2008.
P.S. Wilson, A.H. Reed, W.T. Wood, and R.A. ROY, “The low frequency sound speed in fluid-like gas-bearing sediments,” J. Acoust Soc. Am. 123(4), pp. EL99-EL104, 2008.
C.C. Coussios, and R.A. ROY, “Applications of Acoustics and Cavita-tion to Non-invasive Therapy and Drug Delivery,” Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics 40, 395-420, 2008.
H.Z. Wang, T. Kulkarni, V.K. SARIN and S.N. BASU, “Ordered and twinned multidomain structure in highly Al-rich mullite,” Journal of Materials Research, 22(11), 3210-3217, 2008.
S.G. Topping and V.K. SARIN, “CVD Lu2O3:Eu coatings for advanced scintillators,” International Journal of Refractory Metals and Hard Materials, Vol. 27, No. 2, 2008.
Y. Shen, I.C. Paschalidis, P. VAKILI, and S. Vajda, “Protein Docking by the Underestimation of Free Energy Funnels in the Space of En-counter Complexes,” PLoS Computational Biology, 4(10): e1000191. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000191, October 2008.
H. Aguesse, H.O. WANG and K. Tanaka, “Information Control in a Unified Framework of Consensus Seeking,” International Journal of Information and Systems Sciences, Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 199-209, 2009.
44 www.bu.edu/me/
K. Tanaka, H. Ohtake, and H.O. WANG, “Guaranteed Cost Control of Polynomial Fuzzy Systems via a Sum of Squares Approach,” IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics Part B, Vol. 39, No. 2, pp. 561-567, April 2009.
N. Hara, K. Tanaka, H. Ohtake, and H.O. WANG, “Development of a Flying Robot with Pantograph-based Variable Wing Mechanism,” IEEE Transactions on Robotics, Vol. 25, No. 1, pp. 79-87, February 2009.
K. Tanaka, K. Yamauchi, H. Ohtake, and H.O. WANG, “Sensor Reduc-tion for Backing-UP Control of a Vehicle with Triple Trailers,” IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics, Vol. 56, No. 2, pp. 497-509, February 2009.
V. YAKHOT, “Dissipation Scale Fluctuations and Mixing Transition in Turbulent Flows,” J. Fluid.Mech., 606, 325-337, 2008.
C. Colosqui, H. Chen, X. Shan, I Staroselsky and V. YAKHOT, “Propa-gating High Frequancy Shear Waves in Simple Fluids,” Phys. Fluids., 21, 013105, 2009.
I-K Lin, Y. ZHANG, and X. ZHANG, “The Deformation of Microcan-tilever-Based Infrared Detectors during Thermal Cycling,” Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering, 18 (7), 075012, 2008.
Y. Zhao and X. ZHANG, “Profile Control in Silicon Nanostructures Using Fluorine-Enhanced Oxide Passivation,” IEEE Transactions on Nanotechnology, 7 (1), pp. 40-47, 2008.
Z. Cao and X. ZHANG, “Nanoindentation Stress-Strain Curves of Plas-ma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposited Silicon Oxide Thin Films,” Thin Solid Films, 516 (8) pp. 1941-1951, 2008.
Y. Qiu, R. Liao, and X. ZHANG, “Real-Time Monitoring Primary Car-diomyocyte Adhesion Based on Electrochemical Impedance Spec-troscopy and Electrical Cell-Substrate Impedance Sensing,” Analytical Chemistry, 80 (4), pp. 990-996, 2008.
H. Tao, N.I. Landy, C.M. Bingham, X. ZHANG, R.D. Averitt, and W.J. Padilla, “A Metamaterial Absorber for the Terahertz Regime: Design, Fabrication and Characterization,” Optics Express, 16 (10), pp. 7181-7188, 2008.
S. Huang, H. Tao, I-K Lin, and X. ZHANG, “Development of Double-Cantilever Infrared Detectors: Fabrication, Curvature Control and Demonstration of Thermal Detection,” Sensors and Actuators A: Physical, 145-146, 231-240, 2008.
Y. Liu, I-K Lin, and X. ZHANG, “Mechanical Properties of Sputtered Silicon Oxynitride Films by Nanoindentation,” Materials Science and Engineering A, 489 (1-2), pp. 294-301, 2008.
X. Zheng and X. ZHANG, “Optical Moire as a Visualization Tool for Liv-ing Vascular Cell Contraction Force Mapping,” Applied Physics Letters, 93 (16), 164106, 2008.
C.M. Bingham, H. Tao, X. Liu, R.D. Averitt, X. ZHANG, and W.J. Padilla, “Planar Wallpaper Group Metamaterial for Novel Terahertz Applica-tions,” Optics Express, 16 (23), pp. 18565-18575, 2008.
X. Zheng and X. ZHANG, “An Optical Moire Technique for Cell Trac-tion Force Mapping,” Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineer-ing, 18 (12), 125006, 2008.
H. Tao, A.C. Strikwerda, K. Fan, C.M. Bingham, W.J. Padilla, X. ZHANG, and R.D. Averitt, “Terahertz Metamaterials on Free-standing Highly-flexible Polyimide Substrates,” Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, 41 (23), 232004, 2008.
H. Tao, C.M. Bingham, A.C. Strikwerda, D. Pilon, D. Shrekenhamer, N.I. Landy, K. Fan, X. ZHANG, W.J. Padilla, and R.D. Averitt, “Highly-flexible Wide Angle of Incidence Terahertz Metamaterial Absorber: Design, Fabrication and Characterization,” Physical Review B, 78 (24), 241103, 2008.
A. Strikwerda, K. Fan, H. Tao, D. Pilon, X. ZHANG, and R.D. Averitt, “Comparison of Birefringent Metamaterials and Meanderline Struc-ture as Quarter-Wave Plates at Terahertz Frequencies,” Optics Ex-press, 17 (1), 136-149, 2008.
I-K Lin, Y-M Liao, Y. Liu, K-S Ou, K-S Chen, and X. ZHANG, “Viscoelastic Mechanical Behavior of Soft Microcantilevers-based Force Sensors,” Applied Physics Letters, 93 (25), 251907, 2008.
Y. Wang, X. Zheng, N. Riddick, M. Bryden, W. Baur, X. ZHANG, and H. Surks, “ROCK Isoform Regulation of Myosin Phosphatase and Con-tractility in Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells,” Circulation Research, 104 (4), 531-540, 2009.
Y. Qiu, R. Liao, and X. ZHANG, “Impedance-Based Monitoring of Ongoing Cardiomyocyte Death Induced by Tumor Necrosis Factor Al-pha,” Biophysical Journal, 96 (5), 1985-1991, 2009. An April Fool’s Joke was played on Professor Attaway
452008-2009 Annual Report
P. Chang and S.B. ANDERSSON, “Smooth trajectories for imaging string-like samples in AFM: A preliminary study,” Proceedings of the American Control Conference, pp. 3207-3212, 2008.
D. Baronov and S.B. ANDERSSON, “Tracking a magnetic particle us-ing a magnetic force microscope,’’ Proceedings of the IEEE Confer-ence on Decision and Control, pp. 5170-5175, 2008.
D. Raghunathan and J. BAILLIEUL, “Relative Motion of Robots as a Means for Signaling,” Proceedings of the Int’l Conf. on Intelligent Au-tomation and Robotics, San Francisco, USA, 22-24 October 2008.
D. Baronov and J. BAILLIEUL, “Search Decisions for Teams of Autom-ata,” Proceedings of the 47-th IEEE Conference on Decision and Con-trol, Paper TuB15.4, pp. 1133-1138. Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/CDC.2008.4739365, Cancun, MX, 9-11 December 2008.
D. Raghunathan and J. BAILLIEUL, “Exploiting information content in relative motion,” Proceedings of the Americal Control Conference, St. Louis, ThA606.4, pp. 2166-2171, 10-12 June 2009.
D. Raghunathan and J. BAILLIEUL, “Motion Based Communication Channels between Mobile Robots – A Novel Paradigm for Low Band-width Information Exchange,” 2009 IEEE/RSJ International Confer-ence on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS 2009), St. Louis, 11-15 October 2009.
W.S. Wong and J. BAILLIEUL, “The Standard Parts Problem and the Complexity of Control Communication,’’ Proceedings of the 48th IEEE Conference on Decision and Control, Shanghai, China, 16-18 Decem-ber 2008.
S.O. Newburg, A. Zosuls, P.E. BARBONE, and D.C. Mountain, “Me-chanical response of the basilar membrane to lateral micromanipula-tion,” in N.P. Cooper, D.T. Kemp Eds., Concepts and Challenges in the Biophysics of Hearing, pp. 240-46, World Scientific, London, 2009.
S.O. Newburg, A. Zosuls, P.E. BARBONE, and D.C. Mountain, “Me-chanical response of the basilar membrane to lateral micromanipula-tion,” in Cooper, N. P., Kemp, D. T. Eds., Proceedings of the 10th Inter-national Workshop on the Mechanics of Hearing, pp. 136-41, World Scientific, London, 2008.
C.E. Rivas, P.E. BARBONE, and A.A. Oberai, “A stabilized B-splines FEM formulation for the solution of an inverse elasticity problem aris-ing in medical imaging,” Proceedings of IMECE ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, IMECE2008-66700, 31 October – 6 November, Boston, MA, 2008.
P.E. BARBONE, C.E. Rivas, I. Harari, U. Albocher, A.A. Oberai, and S. Goenzen, “Adjoint-weighted variational formulation for the direct solution of plane stress inverse elasticity problems,” Jour-nal of Physics: Conference Series, 135, 012012 doi:10.1088/1742-6596/135/1/012012, 2008.
C. Rivas, P.E. BARBONE, and A.A. Oberai, “Divergence of finite element formulations for inverse problems treated as optimiza-tion problems,” Journal of Physics: Conference Series, 135, 012088 doi:10.1088/1742-6596/135/1/012088, 2008.
A.A. Oberai, G.R. Feijoo, and P.E. BARBONE, “Time Reversal and Lanczos Iterations,” Journal of Physics: Conference Series, 135, 012078 doi:10.1088/1742-6596/135/1/012078, 2008.
T.L. Steen, S.N. BASU, V.K. SARIN, and T.W. MURRAY, “Measure-ment And Analysis of Narrow-Band Surface Acoustic Waves in Ceram-ic Environmental Barrier Coatings,” AIP Conf. Proc. 975, pp 294-301, 2008.
L. Dal Negro, R. Li, J. Warga, and S.N. BASU, “Silicon nanocrystals in silicon nitride structures: Towards efficient light emission under op-tical and electrical pumping,” Proceedings of 5th IEEE International Conference on Group IV Photonics, pp. 35-37, 2008.
M. Kloetzer, C. Mahulea, C. BELTA, L. Recalde, and M. Silva, “Formal analysis of timed continuous Petri nets,” IEEE Conference on Decision and Control (CDC), Cancun, Mexico, 2008.
M. Imielinski, N. Klitgord, and C. BELTA, “Investigating the genomic basis of metabolic robustness through in silico flux analysis,” IEEE Conference on Decision and Control (CDC), Cancun, Mexico, 2008.
B. Yordanov and C. BELTA, “Formal Analysis of Piecewise Affine Sys-tems under Parameter Uncertainty with Application to Gene Net-works,” American Control Conference (ACC), Seattle, WA, 2008.
M. Kloetzer and C. BELTA, “Distributed implementations of global temporal logic motion specifications,” IEEE Int. Conf. on Robotics and Automation (ICRA), Pasadena, CA, 2008.
Y. Zhou, T.G. BIFANO and C. Lin, “Use of adaptive optics to increase nonlinear imaging signal in mouse bone morrow,” MEMS Adaptive Optics II. SPIE, San Jose, CA, USA, pp. 688808-688809, 2008.
A. Diouf, M. Gingras, J.B. Stewart, T.G. BIFANO, S. Cornelissen and P. Bierden, “Fabrication of single crystalline MEMS DM using anodic wafer bonding,” MEMS Adaptive Optics II. SPIE, San Jose, CA, USA, pp. 68880U-68811, 2008.
S.A. Cornelissen, P.A. Bierden and T.G. BIFANO, “A 4096 element continuous facesheet MEMS deformable mirror for high-contrast im-aging,” MEMS Adaptive Optics II. SPIE, San Jose, CA, USA, pp. 68880V-68810, 2008.
J. Castillo and T.G. BIFANO, “Adaptive optics calibration for a wide-field microscope,” MEMS Adaptive Optics II. SPIE, San Jose, CA, USA, pp. 68880E-68887, 2008.
T.G. BIFANO, P. Bierden and S.A. Cornelissen, “MEMS deformable mirrors for space and defense applications,” Micro (MEMS) and Nan-otechnologies for Space, Defense, and Security II. SPIE, Orlando, FL, USA, pp. 695914-695917, 2008.
T.G. BIFANO, J. Stewart and A. Diouf, “Precise open-loop control of MEMS deformable mirror shape,” MEMS Adaptive Optics II. SPIE, San Jose, CA, USA, pp. 68880P-68885, 2008.
R.O. CLEVELAND, “The Advantage of a Broad Focal Zone in SWL,” Proceedings of the Second International Urolithiasis Research Sympo-sium. A.P. Evan, J.E. Lingeman, J.A. McAteer, and J.C. Williams, eds., pp. 219-225, American Institute of Physics, Melville, NY, 2008.
C O N F E R E N C E P R O C E E D I N G S
46 www.bu.edu/me/
A.G. Stern and D.C. COLE, “Design of a back-illuminated, crystallo-graphically etched, silicon-on-sapphire avalanche photodiode with monolithically integrated microlens, for dual-mode passive & active imaging arrays,” Proceedings of the SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering, v 7153, p 71530Z, p. 13, 2008.
A.G. Stern, and D.C. COLE, “High quantum efficiency, back-illuminat-ed, crystallographically etched, silicon-on-sapphire avalanche photo-diode with very wide dynamic range, for manufacturable high reso-lution imaging arrays,” Proceedings of the SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering, v 7249, p 72490R, p. 12, 2009.
M. Mahvash, and P. DUPONT, “Bilateral Teleoperation of Flex-ible Surgical Robots,” Workshop Proc, New Vistas and Challenges in Telerobotics. IEEE 2008 International Conference on Robotics & Auto-mation, pp. 58-64, 2008.
M. Mahvash and P. DUPONT, “Fast Needle Insertion to Minimize Tissue Deformation and Damage,” IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation 2009.
P. DUPONT, J. Lock, and E. Butler, “Torsional Kinematic Model for Concentric Tube Robots,” IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, 2009.
M. GEVELBER, D. WROBLEWSKI, M. VanHout, O. Ghosh, D. Wil-loughby, and S.N. BASU, “Sensor and Control Design Issues for Implementation of Real-Time Deposition Rate Control for Plasma Spray,” ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress, pp. 10, IMECE2008-68958, Boston, 31 Oct – 6 Nov, 2008.
D. WROBLEWSKI, O. Ghosh, A. Lum, D. Willoughby, M. VanHout, K. Hogstrom, S.N. BASU, and M. GEVELBER, “Modeling and Paramet-ric Analysis of Plasma Spray Particle State Distribution for Deposition Rate Control,” IMECE2008-68752, ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress, Boston, 31 Oct – 6 Nov 2008.
X. Yan, and M. GEVELBER, “Analysis of Electrospinning Nanofibers: Diameter Distribution, Process Dyanmics, and Control,” ASME Inter-national Mechanical Engineering Congress, IMECE2008-68299, pp. 8, Boston, 31 Oct – 6 Nov 2008.
W. Huang, S. GOPALAN, U.B. PAL, and S.N. BASU, “Evaluation of Electrophoretically Deposited CuMn1.8O4 Spinel Coatings On Metal-lic Interconnects for SOFC Applications,” ECS Transactions, 13 [26], pp. 405-411, 2008.
W. Huang, S. GOPALAN, U.B. PAL, and S.N. BASU, “Transport Through Electrophoretically Deposited CuMn1.8O4 Spinel Coatings on Crofer Interconnects”, Proceedings of 2008 MRS Fall Meeting, 2008.
K.J. Yoon, S. GOPALAN, and U.B. PAL, “Effect of Anode Active Layer on Performance of Single Step Co-fired Solid Oxide Fuel Cells (SOF-Cs),” ECS Transactions, Vol. 13 (26) 249, 2008.
K.J. Yoon, S. GOPALAN, and U.B. PAL, “Electrochemical Performance of Single Step Co-Fired Solid Oxide Fuel Cells (SOFCs) Analyzed Us-ing Polarization Modeling and Impedance Spectroscopy,” Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings of the Fall 2008 Meeting, Vol. 1126, S10-02, 2008.
S.M. GRACE, D.L. Sondak, D.J. Dorney, and M. Cannamela, “Hybrid prediction of fan tonal noise,” AIAA, Paper No. 2008-2992, 2008.
A.W. Foley, M.S. HOWE and T.A. Brungart, “Sound generated by gas-jet impingement on the interface of a supercavity,” Proceedings of IMECE2008, 2008 ASME International Mechanical Engineering Con-gress and Exposition, Boston MA, 2-6 November 2008.
P. Du, X. LIN, and X. ZHANG, “Development of Conductive Polymer Micro Cantilever for Conductivity Measurement,” Proceeding of ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, IMECE2008-67986, Boston, MA, 31 October – 6 November 2008.
T.W. MURRAY, O. Balogun, C. Prada, D. Clorennec, and D. Royer, “Theory and applications of laser gene-rated zero- group velocity lamb mode resonance,” AIP Conf. Proc., Vol 975, p. 255, 2008.
S. Bramhavar, B. Pouet, and T.W. MURRAY, “Superheterodyne detec-tion of high frequency acoustic waves,” 1st International Symposium on Laser Ultrasonics: Science, Technology and Applications, On-line proceedings at NDT.net, 2008.
T.W. MURRAY, S. Bramhavar, and B. Pouet, “Theory and Applications of frequency domain laser ultra-sonics,” 1st International Symposium on Laser Ultrasonics: Science, Technology and Applications, On-line proceedings at NDT.net, 2008.
P.A. Zink, K.J. Yoon, U.B. PAL, and S. GOPALAN, “Electrical Perfor-mance of Calcium-doped Lanthanum Ferrite for Use in Single Step Co-Fired Solid Oxide Fuel Cells” Materials Research Society Sympo-sium Proceedings of the Fall 2008 Meeting, Vol. 1126, S11-02, 2008.
S. Pati, M. Suput, R. Delucas, and U.B PAL, “Solid Oxide Membrane Process for Calcium Production Directly from Its Oxide,” EPD Con-gress, S.M. Howard, ed., TMS, Warrendale, PA, pp.121-26, 2008.
S. Pati, R. DeLucas, A. Powell and U.B. PAL, “Magnesiothermic Re-duction of Titanium Oxide Using the Solid Oxide Membrane Process,” Magnesium Technology 2008, pp. 33-38, 2008.
A.D. PIERCE and W.M. CAREY, “Card-house theory of mud sedi-ments containing kaolinite and its acoustical implications,” 156th Mtg. Acoust. Soc. of Am., Proc. of Mtgs. on Acoustics, Vol. 5, 4aUW11, 2008.
A.D. PIERCE and W.M. CAREY, “Shear wave speed increases with depth to the one-sixth power in sandy-silty marine sediments,” 155th Mtg. Acoust. Soc. of Am., Proc. of Mtgs. on Acoustics, Vol. 4, 4aUWc4, 2008.
A.D. PIERCE, “Causality and mathematical models in vibration and acoustics, a realistic perspective,” Proceedings of Meetings on Acous-tics, Vol. 5, Issue 1, pp. 065001-065001-17, 2009.
A.D. PIERCE and W.M. CAREY, “Proof that plane wave attenuation at low frequencies is proportional to square of frequency,” Proceed-ings of Meetings on Acoustics, Vol. 1, Issue 1, pp. 005001-005001-7, 2008.
J.M. Collis, A.D. PIERCE and W.M. CAREY, “Shear waves and the discrepancy between perceived and ideal frequency power laws for sediment attenuation,” Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics, Vol. 2, Issue 1, pp. 005002-005002-12, 2008.
A.D. PIERCE and E. Kotsaros, “Simplified theory of wind turbine noise,” Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics, Vol. 2, Issue 1, pp. 040001-040001-11, 2009.
472008-2009 Annual Report
A.D. PIERCE and W.M. CAREY, “The physical mechanism (viscosity related) of low frequency acoustic wave attenuation in sandy/silty sediments,” Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics, Vol. 5, Issue 1, pp. 005001-005001-12, 2009.
A. Draudt, P. Lai, R.A. ROY, T.W. MURRAY, and R.O. CLEVELAND, “Detection of HIFU lesions in excised tissue using Acousto-Optic Im-aging,” Proceedings of the 8th International Symposium on Therapeu-tic Ultrasound, Vol.1113, pp. 270-274, doi:10.1063/1.3131429, 2009.
P. Lai, R.A. ROY, and T.W. MURRAY, “Sensing the optical properties of diffusive media by acousto-optic pressure contrast imaging,” Photons Plus Ultrasound: Imaging and Sensing 2009, A.A. Oraevsky and L.V. Wang eds., Proceedings of SPIE, Vol. 7177, doi: 10.1117/12.808531, 2009.
G. Zhao, and P. VAKILI, “Monotonicity and Stratification,” Proceed-ings of the 2008 Winter Simulation Conference, pp. 313-319, Dec 2008.
T. Borogovac, and P. VAKILI, “Control Variate Technique: A Construc-tive Approach,” Proceedings of the 2008 Winter Simulation Confer-ence, pp. 320-327, Dec 2008.
J. Yao, H.O. WANG, Z.-H. Guan and W. Xu, “Stability and passivity of complex spatio-temporal switching networks with coupling delays,” Proceedings of the 17th World Congress, the International Federation of Automatic Control, pp. 6638-6641, Seoul, Korea, July 6-11, 2008.
K. Tanaka, H. Ohtake and H.O. WANG, “A Sum of Squares Approach to Guaranteed Cost Control of Polynomial Discrete Fuzzy Systems,” 17th IFAC World Congress, pp. 6861–6868, Seoul, Korea, July 2008.
H. Ohtake, K. Tanaka and H.O. WANG, “Fuzzy Model-based Servo Control for a Class of Nonlinear Systems,” 17th IFAC World Congress, pp. 6850–6854, Seoul, Korea, July 2008.
H. Ohtake, K. Tanaka and H.O. WANG, “Fuzzy Model-based Servo Control for a Class of Nonlinear Systems,” 17th IFAC World Congress, pp. 6850–6854, Seoul, Korea, July 2008.
D. WROBLEWSKI, O. Ghosh, A. Lum, D. Willoughby, M. VanHout, K. Hogstrom, S.N. BASU, and M. GEVELBER, “Modeling and Paramet-ric Analysis of Plasma Spray Particle State Distribution for Deposition Rate Control,” ASME IMECE, Boston, November 2008.
O. Cote, D. WROBLEWSKI, and J. Hacker, “Refractive Turbulence, Transient Propagation Disturbances, and Space Situational Aware-ness (SSA),” Advanced Maui Optical and Space Surveillance Technolo-gies Conference, Maui, September 2008.
H. Tao, A. Strikwerda, C. Bingham, W.J. Padilla, X. ZHANG, and R.D. Averitt, “Dynamical Control of Terahertz Metamaterial Resonance Re-sponse Using Bimaterial Cantilevers,” Proceeding of Progress In Elec-tromagnetics Research Symposium, pp. 870-873, Cambridge, MA, 2-6 July 2008.
Y. Qiu, R. Liao, and X. ZHANG, “Impedance-Sensing Assay for Real-time Monitoring Ongoing Cardiomyocyte Apoptosis,” Proceeding of the 12th International Conference on Miniaturized Systems for Chem-istry and Life Sciences, pp. 970-972, San Diego, CA, 12-16 October 2008.
R. Liao, and X. ZHANG, “A Cardiomyocyte-based Biosensor for the Study on Hypertrophy Induced by Tumor Necrosis Factor Alfa,” Pro-ceeding of the 12th International Conference on Miniaturized Sys-tems for Chemistry and Life Sciences, pp. 1802-1804, San Diego, CA, 12-16 October 2008.
I-K Lin, Y-M Liao, K-S Chen, and X. ZHANG, “Viscoelastic Character-ization of Soft Micropillars for Cellular Mechanics Study,” Proceed-ing of the 12th International Conference on Miniaturized Systems for Chemistry and Life Sciences, pp. 278-280, San Diego, CA, USA, 12-16 October 2008.
X. Zheng and X. ZHANG, “A Novel Versatile Biomechano-sensor for Real Time Vascular Cell Contractility Mapping,” Proceeding of the 12th International Conference on Miniaturized Systems for Chemistry and Life Sciences, pp. 510-512, San Diego, CA, 12-16 October 2008.
X. Zheng and X. ZHANG, “Diffraction Moire: Decoupling Distortions in Periodic Polymeric Post Arrays,” Proceeding of the 12th Interna-tional Conference on Miniaturized Systems for Chemistry and Life Sci-ences, pp. 991-993, San Diego, CA, 12-16 October 2008.
H. Tao, N.I. Landy, K. Fan, A. Strikwerda, W.J. Padilla, R.D. Averitt, and X. ZHANG, “Flexible Terahertz Metamaterials: Towards a Terahertz Metamaterial Invisible Cloak,” Proceeding of 2008 International Elec-tron Devices Meeting, pp. 11.6.1-11.6.4, San Francisco, CA, USA, 15-17 December 2008.
B.C. Kaanta, H. Chen, G. Lambertus, W.H. Steinecker, O. Zhdaneev, and X. ZHANG, “High Sensitivity Micro-Thermal Conductivity Detec-tor for Gas Chromatography,” Proceeding of the 22nd IEEE Interna-tional Conference on Micro Electro Mechanical Systems, Sorrento, pp. 264-267, Italy, 25-29 January 2009.
H. Tao, N.I. Landy, K. Fan, A. Strikwerda, W.J. Padilla, R.D. Averitt, and X. ZHANG, “Terahertz Metamaterials with Simultaneously Negative Electric and Magnetic Resonance Responses based on Bimaterial Pop up Structures,” Proceeding of the 22nd IEEE International Con-ference on Micro Electro Mechanical Systems, pp. 108-111, Sorrento, Italy, 25-29 January 2009.
X. ZHANG, “Creating Micro/Nano Fabricated Structures for Cellular Mechanical Force Measurements in Living Cells,” NSF Design, Service and Manufacturing Grantees and Research Conference, Knoxville, TN, 7-10 January 2008.
X. ZHANG, “A Digital Bio/Nanoelectronics Interface for Single Cell Study,” NSF Design, Service and Manufacturing Grantees and Re-search Conference, Knoxville, TN, 7-10 January 2008.
X. ZHANG, “Mechanical Behavior of Amorphous Plasma-Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposited Silicon Oxide Films for MEMS Applica-tions,” NSF Design, Service and Manufacturing Grantees and Re-search Conference, Knoxville, TN, 7-10 January 2008.
X. ZHANG, “Thermo- and Electromechanics of Multilayer Thin-Film Microstructures for MEMS Applications,” Mechanics of Materials & Devices and Structural Mechanics, AFOSR Contractors’ Meeting, Ar-
lington, VA, 18-20 August 2008.
48 www.bu.edu/me/
I N V I T E D P R E S E N T A T I O N S
S. ANDERSSON, “A non-raster approach to scanning force micros-copy”, Society of Engineering Science, 14 October 2008.
S. ANDERSSON, “Studying single molecules through tracking,” Ro-botics, Control and Mechatronics Colloquium, University of Washing-ton, 17 October 2008.
J. BAILLIEUL, “Modeling and Control of Physical Networks,” IFAC 2008, Workshop on Complex Embedded and Networked Control Sys-tems, Seoul Korea, July 2008.
J. BAILLIEUL, “The Psychology of Human-Robot Interaction,” Plenary Lecture given at the SICE Annual Conference, Tokyo Japan, August 2008.
J. BAILLIEUL, “Communication by Means of Controlled Dynamical System Motions,” Mechanical Engineering Seminar Series, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, October 2008.
J. BAILLIEUL, “Communication Through Action---Theme and Varia-tions,” Fall Southeastern Meeting of the American Mathematical So-ciety, Huntsville, AL, October 2008.
L. BARBA, Mechanical Engineering, Belytschko-Liu group, North-western University, August 2008.
L. BARBA, Mechanical Engineering Seminar, Purdue University, Au-gust 2008.
L. BARBA, “Global field interpolation for particle methods”, Applied Mathematics Colloquium, Illinois Institute of Technology, August 2008.
L. BARBA, “Meshfree methods and vortex methods”, 4th Latin Amer-ican SCAT Workshop, Faculty of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, University of Chile, Santiago, September 2008.
L. BARBA, “Meshfree methods and vortex methods”, Instituto Madrileño de Estudios Avanzados IMDEA, Madrid, Spain February 2009.
P. BARBONE, “Some math and mechanics of biomechanical imag-ing: current status and open questions,” Banff International Research Station for Mathematical Innovation and Discovery (BIRS), Workshop on Inverse Problems: Recent Progress and New Challenges, Banff, Canada, November 17-20, 2008.
P. BARBONE and Jeffrey C. Bamber, “Ultrasound Elastography: Quan-titative Approaches, Invited Short Course,” 2008 IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium, Beijing, China, November 2-5, 2008,
P. BARBONE, “Computational formulations for inverse problems with interior data,” Dept. of Instrumentation, Beihang University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Beijing, China, 5 November 2008.
P. BARBONE, “Inverse elasticity problems in biomedical imaging,” Faculty of Engineering, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel, 22 Septem-ber 2008.
S. BASU, “Functionally Graded Environmental Barrier Coatings,” Carnegie Mellon University, 19 September 2008.
C. BELTA, “Insights into the functional organization and robustness of genome scale metabolism,” University of Maryland, Baltimore Coun-ty, Applied Mathematics and Statistics, 5 December 2008.
T. BIFANO, “MEMS Adaptive Optics,” SPIE San Jose, CA, 2008.
M. CARAMANIS, “The European Community Electricity Regulation and Green Initiative,” Invited Lecture to the US Energy Bar Associa-tion, Troutman Sanders LLP, Washington DC, 27 October 2008.
M. CARAMANIS, “The Liberalization of Greek Energy Markets: Load Management and the Electrification of the Transportation Sector,” Ministry of Exterior International Conference, Athens, Greece, 8 July 2008.
M. CARAMANIS, “Commercialization of Renewable Electricity Gen-eration Technologies: Lifting Adoption Barriers,” European Union, US Roundtable, New Orleans, LA, 14 November 2008.
W.M. CAREY and A.D. Pierce, “Acoustical characteristics of muddy sediments,” 156th Meeting of The Acoust. Soc. of Am., 13 November 2008.
W.M. CAREY, “On the exponential power law for low frequency at-tenuation in shallow water with sandy sediments,” 156th Meeting of The Acoustical Society of America, 11 November 2008.
W.M. CAREY, Jason D. Holmes and J.F. Lynch, “The applicability of a small autonomous vehicle towed array to ocean acoustics measure-ments and signal processing,” Invited Paper 5aUWh5, 155th Meeting of The Acoustical Society of America, 4 July 2008.
E.P. Sullivan, W.M. CAREY, J.D. Holmes and J.F. Lynch, “Passive Syn-thetic Apertures as an Experimental Tool,” Invited Paper-5aUWi2, 155th Meeting of The Acoustical Society of America, July 4, 2008.
ROBIN O. CLEVELAND, Lecturer on Medical Acoustics at the Physical Acoustics Summer School, Santa Fe, NM, 2008.
D.C. COLE, “Intellectual assets background essential for leading edge energy companies,” NRG, 8 December 2008.
P. DUPONT, “Steerable Needles as Surgical Robots,” MICCAI 2008 Workshop, Needle Steering: Recent Results and Future Opportuni-ties, New York, NY, 2008.
K.L. EKINCI, “Radiofrequency Scanning Tunneling Microscopy,” Con-densed Matter Seminar, UC Berkeley, CA, November 3, 2008.
K.L. EKINCI, “Radiofrequency Scanning Tunneling Microscopy,” Inter-national Conference on Nanoscience + Technology, Keystone, CO, 5 July 2008.
M.A. GEVELBER, “Alternative Control Strategies and Requirements for Improving Thermal Spray Performance,” the Symposium on Im-proving Reliability and Consistency in Thermal Spray, Montreal Que-bec, 2-3 Dec 2008.
S. GOPALAN, “Polarization Measurements on Single Step Cofired Anode-Supported SOFCs,” ETH Zurich.
492008-2009 Annual Report
R.G. HOLT, “Fighting bubbles with bubbles: A sparse, foam-anchored bubble layer for wall damage mitigation,” the NCPA Colloquium, Uni-versity of Mississipi, Oxford, MS, October 2008.
M.S. HOWE, “Sound generated by vortex ring impingement on a heated wall,” Department of Mathematics, University of Keele, Eng-land, 10 July 2008.
C. KLAPPERICH, “Towards the Application of Molecular Diagnostics in Global Health,” Washington University, St. Louis, MO, Biomedical Engineering Seminar Series, 3 December 2008.
C. KLAPPERICH, “Towards the Application of Molecular Diagnostics in Global Health,” Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, Biomedi-cal Engineering Seminar Series, 5 November 2008.
C. KLAPPERICH, “Microfluidic Sample Preparation for Molecular De-tection of Infectious Disease,” American Vacuum Society, 55th Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, 23 October 2008.
C. KLAPPERICH, “Towards the Application of Molecular Diagnostics in Global Health,” Georgia Institute of Technology, Bioengineering Pro-gram Seminar Series, 9 September 2008.
C. KLAPPERICH, “Microfluidic Sample Preparation for Molecular De-tection of Infectious Disease,” MEDI 2008, Hartford, CT, 10 Septem-ber 2008.
X. LIN, “Computing viscosity of supercooled liquids,” Department of Physics, Boston University, Boston, MA, December 2008.
J.G. MCDANIEL, “Powering and empowering acoustic defenses of the future,” the Chief of Naval Operation’s Strategic Studies Group at the Bernard M. Gordon Center for Subsurface Sensing & Imaging Systems (Gordon-CenSSIS), Northeastern University, 12 December 2008.
J.G. MCDANIEL, “Implicitly causal expansions in the frequency do-main,” 156th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, Miami, FL, 13 November 2008.
E.F. MORGAN, Department Seminar, “Measurement of the Local Me-chanical Environment of Skeletal Tissues,” Bioengineering, University of Utah, February 2009.
E.F. MORGAN, Department Seminar, “Inducing Skeletal Repair by Mechanical Stimulation,” Bioengineering, University of Pennsylvania, November 2008.
E.F. MORGAN, Department Seminar, “Inducing Skeletal Repair by Mechanical Stimulation,” Bioengineering, University of Maryland, October 2008.
E.F. MORGAN, Invited Lecture, “The Influence of the Mechanical En-vironment on Skeletal Repair,” Orthopaedic Trauma Association Basic Science Fracture Forum, Denver, CO, October 2008.
E.F. MORGAN, “Mechanical Regulation of Skeletal Healing,” Sympo-sium on “Biomaterials: properties, variation and evolution,” Annual Meeting of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, Bos-ton, January 2009.
T.W. MURRAY, S. Bramhavar, A. Sampathkumar and B. Pouet, “Theo-ry and applications of frequency domain photoacoustic microscopy,” Acoustics ‘08, 155th ASA Meeting, Paris, France, July 2008.
T.W. MURRAY, S. Bramhavar, and B. Pouet, “Theory and Applications of frequency domain laser ultrasonics,” 1st International Symposium on Laser Ultrasonics: Science, Technology and Applications, Montre-al, Canada, July 2008.
T.W. MURRAY, “Laser based acoustic techniques for sensing and im-aging: Photoacoustic microscopy and acousto-optic imaging,” Univer-sity of Colorado at Boulder, February 2008.
T.W. MURRAY, “Mechanical Characterization of coatings using fre-quency domain photoacoustic microscopy,” International Conference on Metallurgical Coatings and Thin Films, San Diego, CA, April 2008.
U. PAL, “Fuel Cells: State of the Art and Challenges for Clean and Ef-ficient Power Generation,” IMAPS Boston, MA, December 2008.
U. PAL, “Clean Energy Electrochemical Technologies Research at Bos-ton University,” New England University Workshop in Solid State Ion-ics, Boston, MA, November 2008.
U. PAL, “Clean Energy Research at Boston University,” Hydrogen Co-alition, Boston, MA, August 2008.
U. PAL, “Causality and mathematical models in vibration and acous-tics: A realistic perspective,” the ASA meeting in Miami, November 2008.
A. PIERCE, “The physical mechanism (viscosity related) of low-fre-quency acoustic wave attenuation in sandy/silty sediments,” the ASA meeting in Miami, November 2008.
R.A. ROY, “Shedding light on sound: multi-mode biomedical imaging using acousto-optic sensing and B-mode ultrasound,” Department of Physics Seminar, Univ. of Vermont, Burlington, VT, November 2008.
R.A. ROY, “Bubbles, cavitation, and therapeutic ultrasound,” Depart-ment of Biomedical Engineering Coloquium, Columbia University, New York, NY, October 2008.
C.-C. Coussios, M. Arora, J.R.T. Collin, M. Gyongy, C. Arvanitis, E. Cox, E. Kornaropoulos, S. Nandlall, P. Kennedy and R.A. ROY, “Harnessing inertial cavitation for improved cancer treatment by high-intensity focussed ultrasound (HIFU),” the 18th International Symposium on Therapeutic Ultrasound, Stockholm, Sweden, July 2008.
J.R. Collin, I. Webb, R.A. ROY and C.C. Coussios, “Towards a standard-ized approach for quantifying inertial cavitation activity,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 123(5), 3004, 2008.
R.A. ROY, Z.J. Waters, B.R. Dzikowicz, and R.G. Holt, “The detection and characterization of buried targets by iterative, single-channel time reversal,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 123(5), 3185, 2008.
Z.J. Waters, B.R. Dzikowicz, R.G. Holt, and R.A. ROY, “Laboratory in-vestigations of the detection and characterization of buried targets by iterative, single-channel time reversal,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 123(5), 3599, 2008.
B.R. Dzikowicz. Z.J. Waters, R.G. Holt, and R.A. ROY, “Detection of a resonant target buried in sediment using iterative time reversal: mid-frequency pond experiments,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 123(5), 3755, 2008.
V.K. SARIN, “Engineered Materials Development via CVD” “ IIT Mum-bai, Mumbai, India, February 2008.
50 www.bu.edu/me/
V.K. SARIN, “Development of Transparent Ceramics for Scintallators” ALEM/RMD, Watertown, MA, August 2008.
V. YAKHOT, “High- Frequency Oscillating Flows: Applications to Nanoresonators,” Princeton University, November 2008.
V. YAKHOT, “High- Frequency Oscillating Flows: Applications to Nanoresonators,” Brown University, Colloquim, October 2008.
Y. ZHANG, “Linked Mechanical and Biological Study of Extracellular
Matrix (ECM) Mechanics,” Department of Medicine, Boston Univer-sity, November 2008.
X. ZHANG, “Small-Scale Materials and Engineering Mechanics for Next-Generation Micro/Nanosystems,” the DARPA/MTO Workshop on Materials and Technologies for 21st Century MEMS and NEMS, Miami, FL, USA, January 8, 2008.
R.D. Averitt and X. ZHANG, “Terahertz Metamaterial Devices,” Army Research Laboratory, Adelphi, MD, USA, November 2008.
C O N T R I B U T E D P R E S E N T A T I O N S
F.A. Cruz and L.A. BARBA, “Characterization of the FMM approxima-tion in particle simulations,” 8th World Congress on Computational Mechanics / ECCOMAS 2008, Venice, 30 June–7 July 2008.
L.A. BARBA and L.F. Rossi, “Accurate solution of global field interpola-tions for particle simulations,” 8th World Congress on Computational Mechanics / ECCOMAS 2008, Venice, 30 June–7 July 2008.
S. Goenezen, A.A. Oberai, and P.E. BARBONE, “Nonlinear elasticity imaging for incompressible solids,” 2008 International Conference on the Ultrasonic Measurement and Imaging of Tissue Elasticity, Austin, TX, 27–30 October 2008.
R. Leiderman, G.P. Berry, J.C. Bamber, Y. Zhang, A.A. Oberai, C.E. Ri-vas, O. Babaniyi and P.E. BARBONE, “Multiscale mechanical modeling of fluid/solid mixtures: Applications to soft tissue mechanics,” 2008 International Conference on the Ultrasonic Measurement and Imag-ing of Tissue Elasticity, Austin, TX, 27–30 October 2008.
R.A. Crescenti, J.C. Bamber, A.A. Oberai, P.E. BARBONE, J.P Richter, N.L Bush, and S. Webb, “Advances and difficulties in the use of ultra-sound elastography and inverse algorithms for gel dosimetry,” 2008 International Conference on the Ultrasonic Measurement and Imag-ing of Tissue Elasticity, Austin, TX, 27–30 October 2008.
G.P. Berry, J.C. Bamber, and P.E. BARBONE, “Simulated indentation of poroelastic tissue affected by lymphoedema,” 2008 International Conference on the Ultrasonic Measurement and Imaging of Tissue Elasticity, Austin, TX, 27–30 October 2008.
Z.D. Mason, P.E. BARBONE, and E.F. MORGAN, “Experimental mea-surement of 3-D deformation and failure patterns in the vertebra us-ing digital volume correlation,” 2008 ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exhibition, Boston, MA, 31 Oct – 6 Nov 2008.
A.A. Oberai, G.R. Feijoo, and P.E. BARBONE, “Efficient Time Reversal by Lanczos Iterations,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 123, p. 3596, 2008.
P.E. BARBONE, R. Leiderman, J.C. Bamber, G.P. Berry, A.A. Oberai, and Y. Zhang, “Measuring physiological properties of lymphoedemous tissues by ultrasound: theoretical foundations,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol.123, Issue 5, p. 3226, 2008.
D. D’Orsogna, P. Lamarre, E. Bellotti, P.E. BARBONE, F. Smith, C. Fulk, P. LoVecchio, M. Reine, S. Tobin and J. Markunas, “Toward the De-velopment of Low Stress Ohmic Contacts to HgCdTe: A Novel Stress Characterization Technique,” 2008 U.S. Workshop on the PHYSICS and CHEMESTRY of I I-VI MATERIALS, Las Vegas, NV, 11-13 November 2008.
C. Rivas, P. BARBONE, A. Oberai, “A stabilized B-splines FEM formula-tion for the solution of an inverse elasticity problem arising in medical imaging,” 2008 ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress & Exposition, Boston, MA, 31 Oct –6 November 2008.
O. Babaniyi, C.E. Rivas, P.E. BARBONE, and A.A. Oberai, “Comparing slice-by-slice 2-D tissue stiffness reconstructions to full 3-D tissue stiffness reconstructions,” Gordon-CenSSIS Research & Industrial Col-laboration Conference, Boston University, Boston, November2008.
E. BAROUCH and S. Knodle, “A new calibration method for latent image fidelity,” SPIE Taiwan, Proc. SPIE, Vol. 7140, 714012 (2008); doi:10.1117/12.804271, 4 November 2008.
S.N. BASU, W. Huang, S. GOPALAN, and U.B. PAL, “Transport Through Electrophoretically Deposited CuMn1.8O4 Spinel Coatings on Crofer Interconnects,” the MRS Fall Meeting, Boston, MA, 1-5 December 2008.
L. DalNegro, R. Li, J. Warga, and S.N. BASU, “Silicon nanocrystals in silicon nitride structures: Towards efficient light emission under opti-cal and electrical pumping,” the 5th IEEE International Conference on Group IV Photonic, Sorrento, Italy, 17-19 September 2008.
W.M. CAREY and A.D. PIERCE, “Acoustical characteristics of muddy sediments (A),” J. Acoust. Soc, Am., Vol. 24, Issue 4, Pt. 1, p. 2561, October 2008.
W.M. CAREY, A.D. PIERCE and T.M. PORTER, “Card-house theory of mud sediments containing kaolinite and its acoustical implications (A),” J. Acoust. Soc, Am., Vol. 124, Issue 4, pt. 2, p. 2561, October 2008.
P.V. Chitnis, N.J. Manzi, R.O. CLEVELAND, R.A. ROY, and R.G. HOLT, “Introduction of a compliant gas-layer serves to mitigate damage to solid surfaces from the collapse of cavitation bubble clouds,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 123 (5), p. 3561, 2008.
C. Ormonde, P. Chitnis, R.O. CLEVELAND, R.G. HOLT, and R.A. ROY, “A vertical acoustic waveguide for two-phase mercury-helium flow void fraction determination,” IMECE2008, abstract No. 66791, pg. 196, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2008.
C.E. Ormond, P.V. Chitnis, R.O. CLEVELAND, R.G. HOLT and R.A. ROY, “An acoustic resonator for determining the gas volume fraction in mercury-helium two-phase flows,” the 2008 NSF Site Visit of the Center for Subsurface Sensing and Imaging Systems, Boston, MA, No-vember 2008.
512008-2009 Annual Report
R.O. CLEVELAND, H. Luo, and J.C. Williams, “Elastic waves in human kidney stones: Shear dominates spall in shock wave lithotripsy,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 123 (5), p. 3368, 2008.
A. Sampathkumar, K.L. EKINCI, T.W. MURRAY, “Nanobeam Displace-ment Mapping Using Full-field Interferometry” 1st International Sym-posium on Laser Ultrasonics: Science, Technology and Applications, Montreal, Canada, July 2008.
X. Yan, and M. GEVELBER, “Investigation of Electrospinning Param-eters that Determine Fiber Diameter Distribution,”� The Fiber Society 2008 Technical Conference, Boucherville Canada, 1-3 October 2008.
S. GOPALAN, “One-Step Co-Firing of Anode-Supported SOFCs,” The European Fuel Cell Forum, Lucerne, Switzerland, 1 July 2008.
S. GRACE, D.L. Sondak, and D.J. Dorney, “Simulation of turbofan inter-action noise,” ASME IMECE, Boston, MA 2008.
B.R. Dzikowicz, Z.J. Waters, R.G. HOLT, and R.A. Roy, “Detection of a resonant target buried in sediment using iterative time reversal: mid-frequency pond experiments,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 123 (5), p. 3755, 2008.
Z.J. Waters, B.R. Dzikowicz, R.G. HOLT, and R.A. ROY, “Laboratory in-vestigations of the detection and characterization of buried targets by iterative, single-channel time reversal,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 123 (5), P. 3599, 2008.
Z.J. Waters, B.R. Dzikowicz, R.G. HOLT, and R.A. ROY, “Isolation of backscattering resonances of a thin spherical shell using iterative time reversal,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 123 (5), p. 3340, 2008.
N.J. Manzi, P.V. Chitnis, R.G. HOLT, R.O. CLEVELAND, and R.A. ROY, “Introduction of a gas bubble layer to mitigate cavitation erosion damage to solid surfaces,” IMECE2008, abstract No. 67289, p. 196, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2008.
Z.J. Waters, B.R. Dzikowicz, R.G. HOLT, and R.A. ROY, “Experimental and numerical investgations of single-channel acoustic time reversal for buried object detection,” IMECE2008, abstract No. 67475, p. 58, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2008.
C.H. Farny, R.G. HOLT, and R.A. ROY, “Spatially-sensitive ex vivo cav-itation detection with an array detector,” the 2008 meeting of the International Society for Therapeutic Ultrasound, Minneapolis, MN, September 2008.
Z.J. Waters, B.R. Dzikowicz, R.G. HOLT and R.A. ROY, “Resonance isolation in the presence of noise and clutter by single-channel time reversal,” the 2008 Research and Industrial Collaboration Conference of the Center for Subsurface Sensing and Imaging Systems, Boston, MA, November 2008.
A.W. Foley, M.S. HOWE and T.A. Brungart, “Sound generated by gas-jet impingement on the interface of a supercavity,” Proceedings of IMECE2008, 2008 ASME International Mechanical Engineering Con-gress and Exposition, Boston MA, 2-6 November 2008.
M.S. HOWE and A. Manela, “The Forced Motion of a Flag,” 61st An-nual Meeting of the American Physical Society, Division of Fluid Dy-namics, San Antonio, Texas, 23-25 November 2008.
R.S. McGowan and M.S. HOWE, “Implications of the fluctuating drag force voice source,” Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, Paris, France, July 2008.
R. S. McGowan and M.S. HOWE, “Influence of the ventricular folds on the voice source.” Symposium on Vocal Fold Physiology and Bio-medicine, Tampere, Finland, August 2008.
M-C. Kim, Q. Cao, and C.M. KLAPPERICH, “A Thermoplastic Continu-ous-Flow Microfludic Device for Polymerase Chain Reaction: Model and Experiments,” 2008 ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress & Exposition, Boston, MA, 31 Oct – 6 Nov 2008.
C.M. Rebholz, P.M. Mitchell, H.A. Zaniboni, T.J. Winn, C.A. Odell, C.M. KLAPPERICH, and J.A. Feldman, “The Impact of Rapid Influ-enza Testing on Adult and Pediatric Patient Management,” Annals of Emergency Medicine, 52(4), p. S73 Supplement 1, October 2008.
Q. Cao, M. Mahalanabis, M. Kim, C.M. KLAPPERICH, “Simplified micro-fluidic devices for the detection of influenza Type A”, CIMIT Innovation Congress, Boston, MA, October 2008.
J.Y. Zhang, J. Do, S. Lee, W.R. Premasiri, L. Zieger, and C.M. KLAP-PERICH, “In-situ Fabrication of Surface-enhanced Raman Scattering Substrate in Microfluidic Chip for Ultrasensitive Infectious Disease Detection,” CIMIT Innovation Congress, Boston, MA, October 2008.
N. Spencer, C.M. KLAPPERICH, and D. Cotanche, “Understanding the regulation of cell fate in the avian cochlea by the extracellular ma-trix,” CIMIT Innovation Congress, Boston, MA, October 2008.
X. LIN, “Soliton Theory Revisited, American Chemical Society,” Phila-delphia, August 2008.
X. LIN, “Conductive Polymer Actuation via Solitonic Deformations,” American Chemical Society, Philadelphia, August 2008.
X. LIN, “Predicting Viscosity of Supercooled Liquids,” American Chemical Society, Philadelphia, August 2008.
P. Du, X. LIN, and X. ZHANG, “Conductive Polymer based Actuators,” ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposi-tion, Boston, MA, 31 October – 6 November 2008.
X. LIN, “Computing transition pathway in bulk activated processes and viscosity of supercooled liquids,” Materials Research Society, December 2008.
P. Du, X. LIN, and X. ZHANG, “Development of Conductive Polymer Single Layer Cantilever For Conductivity Measurement,” Polymer-Based Smart Materials--Process, Properties, and Application, Mate-rials Research Society Fall Meeting, Boston, MA, 1-5 December 2008.
X. LIN, “Alternatives to Copper Phthalocyanine as Organic Conduc-tors,” Materials Research Society, December 2008.
Elizabeth A. Magliula and J.G. MCDANIEL, “Achieving flexural direc-tivity in orthotropic plates,” Presentation IMECE2008-68864, ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, Bos-ton, MA, 5 November 2008.
E.F. MORGAN, A.H. Baker, Z.D Mason, and A.I. Hussein, “Quantita-tive, three-dimensional visualization of vertebral fractures,” World Congress on Osteoporosis, Bangkok, Thailand, 2008.
52 www.bu.edu/me/
K.T. Salisbury Palomares, R.E. Gleason, D. Bellin, G.J. Miller, and E.F. MORGAN, “Correlations between local strains and tissue phenotypes in an experimental model of skeletal healing,” Gordon Research Con-ference on Musculoskeletal Biology and Bioengineering, Andover, NH, 2008.
G.J. Miller and E.F. MORGAN, “Use of nanoindentation to determine viscoelastic and biphasic material properties of hydrogels and articu-lar cartilage,” ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exhibition, Boston, MA, 2008.
A.I. Hussein, Z.D. Mason, and E.F. MORGAN, “Predictions of vertebral strength from quantitative measures of the intra-vertebral heteroge-neity in density,” ASME Summer Bioengineering Conference, Marco Island, FL, 2008.
P.L. Leong and E.F. MORGAN, “Correlation between nanoindentation modulus and mineral density in fracture callus tissues,” ASME Sum-mer Bioengineering Conference, Marco Island, FL, 2008.
L.N.M. Hayward and E.F. MORGAN, “Mechano-regulation of stem cell differentiation during bending stimulation of a healing bone defect,” ASME Summer Bioengineering Conference, Marco Island, FL, 2008.
P.L. Leong and E.F. MORGAN, “Regional variations in fracture callus material properties measured via nanoindentation,” Paper #1009, 54th Annual Meeting of the Orthopaedic Research Society, San Fran-cisco, CA, 2008.
K.T. Salisbury Palomares, T.A. Einhorn, L.C. Gerstenfeld, and E.F. MOR-GAN, “Transcriptional profiling of mechanically induced cartilaginous tissues in vivo,” Paper #611, 54th Annual Meeting of the Orthopaedic Research Society, San Francisco, CA, 2008.
K.T. Salisbury Palomares, G.E. Miller, and E.F. MORGAN, “Experimen-tal measurement of strains in callus tissues: correlations with me-chanically induced tissue phenotypes during skeletal repair,” Paper #1008, 54th Annual Meeting of the Orthopaedic Research Society, San Francisco, CA, 2008.
L.C. Gerstenfeld, D. Sacks, M. Pelis, Z.D. Mason, E.F. MORGAN, and T.A. Einhorn, “Comparison of alendronate versus denosumab (a monoclonal anti-RANKL antibody) on murine fracture healing,” Paper #890, 54th Annual Meeting of the Orthopaedic Research Society, San Francisco, CA, 2008.
E.F. MORGAN, Z.D. Mason, G. Bishop, A.D. Davis, L.C. Gerstenfeld, and T.A. Einhorn, “Combined effects of BMP-7 and PTH in metaphy-seal bone healing,” Paper #399, 54th Annual Meeting of the Ortho-paedic Research Society, San Francisco, CA, 2008.
G.L. Barnes, S. Kakar, S. Vora, N. Record, N.A. Wigner, E.F. MORGAN, L.C. Gerstenfeld, and T.A. Einhorn, “Enhanced chondrogenic matura-tion in PTH treated fractures,” Paper #167, 54th Annual Meeting of the Orthopaedic Research Society, San Francisco, CA, 2008.
L. Alsofi, J. Xu, Z.D. Mason, E.F. MORGAN, Y. Deguchi, M. Yamauchi, and P.C. Trackman, “Trabecular bone phenotype in lysyl oxidase iso-form knockout mice,” 37th Annual Meeting of the American Associa-tion for Dental Research, 2008.
S. Bramhavar, B. Pouet, and T.W. MURRAY, “Superheterodyne detec-tion of high frequency acoustic waves,” 1st International Symposium on Laser Ultrasonics: Science, Technology and Applications, Montre-
al, Canada, July 2008.
T.M. PORTER, “Development of phase-shift nanoemulsions to en-hance HIFU efficiency,” the 155th Meeting of the Acoustical Society, Paris France, 1 July 2008.
T.M. PORTER, “HIFU-controlled delivery of DOX from lysolipid con-taining thermosensitive liposomes,” the annual meeting of the In-ternational Society for Therapeutic Ultrasound, Minneapolis MN, 11 September 2008.
T.M. PORTER, “Enhancement of rt-PA activity with 2-MHz transcra-nial Doppler ultrasound,” the 2008 American Society of Mechanical Engineers, International Mechanical Engineering Congress in Boston, MA, 31 October – 6 November 2008.
T.M. PORTER, “Ultrasound-induced thermal lesion formation with phase shift emulsion,” the annual meeting of the International So-ciety for Therapeutic Ultrasound, Minneapolis MN, 12 September 2008.
T.M. PORTER, “The potential application of phase shift emulsion in high intensity focused ultrasound therapy,” the 2008 ASME Interna-tional Mechanical Engineering Congress in Boston, MA, 31 October – 6 November 2008.
P. Lai, R.A. ROY and T.W. MURRAY, “Photorefractive crystal based acousto optic imaging system in the near infrared oprical wave-length,” IMECE2008, abstract No. 66204, pg. 79, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2008.
A. Draudt, P. Lai, R.A. ROY, T.W. MURRAY and R.O. CLEVELAND, “Characterizing the dynamic properties of HIFU lesions,” the 2008 Re-search and Industrial Collaboration Conference of the Center for Sub-surface Sensing and Imaging Systems, Boston, MA, November 2008.
P. Lai, R.A. ROY, and T.W. MURRAY, “Pressure Contrast Imaging: A new approach to the acousto-optic detection of optical scattering in-homogeneities at depth in diffuse media,” the 2008 Research and In-dustrial Collaboration Conference of the Center for Subsurface Sens-ing and Imaging Systems, Boston, MA, November 2008.
R.A. ROY, P. Lai, and T.W. MURRAY, “Multi-mode tissue imaging us-ing acousto-optic sensing and B-mode ultrasound,” the 2008 meeting of the International Society for Therapeutic Ultrasound, Minneapolis, MN, September 2008.
R.A. ROY, T. Wu, C.H. Farny, T.W. MURRAY and R.G. HOLT, “Controlled cavitation nucleation with laser-illuminated nano-particles,” the 2008 meeting of the International Society for Therapeutic Ultrasound, Minneapolis, MN, September 2008.
R.A. ROY, Z.J. Waters, B.R. Dzikowicz, and R.G. HOLT, “The detection and characterization of buried resonant targets by iterative, single-channel time reversal,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 123 (5), p. 3185, 2008.
A. Draudt, P. Lai, P, R.A. ROY, T.W. MURRAY and R.O. CLEVELAND, “Detection of HIFU lesions in excised tissue using Acousto-Optic Im-aging,” the 2008 meeting of the International Society for Therapeutic Ultrasound, Minneapolis, MN, September 2008.
I. Webb, M. Arora, S. Payne, R.A. ROY, and C.C. Coussios, “Experimen-tal investigation of the effect of heating rate on pre-existing gas nuclei in a viscoelastic medium,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 123(5), 3560, 2008.
532008-2009 Annual Report
R.A. ROY, C.E. Ormonde, P.V. Chitnis, R.O. CLEVELAND and R.G. HOLT, “An acoustic resonator for determining the void fraction of bubbly mercury flows,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 123(5), p. 3559, 2008.
P. VAKILI, “Path-dependent Option Price and Sensitivity Estimation through Structured Database Monte-Carlo Simulation,” the Financial Management Association 2008 Annual Conference, Dallas, TX, 8-11 October 2008.
P. VAKILI, “Monotonicity and Stratification,” the 2008 Winter Simula-tion Conference, Miami, FL, 7-11 December 2008.
P. VAKILI, “Control Variate Technique: A Constructive Approach,” Mi-ami, FL, 7-11 December 2008.
O. Cote, D. WROBLEWSKI, and J. Hacker, J., “Refractive Turbulence, Transient Electronic Disconnectivity, and Propagation Situational Awareness (PSA),” 47th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Orlando, January 2009.
H. Tao, A.C. Strikwerda, C.M. Bingham, W.J. Padilla, X. ZHANG, and R.D. Averitt, “Dynamical Control of Terahertz Metamaterial Reso-nance Response Using Bimaterial Cantilevers,” the Progress In Elec-tromagnetics Research Symposium, Cambridge, MA, 2-6 July 2008.
I-K Lin, H. Lu, and X. ZHANG, “Viscoelastic Characterization and Mod-eling of Soft Micropillars as Force Transducer,” Gordon Research Con-ference on Thin Film & Small Scale Mechanical Behavior, Waterville, ME, 27 July – 1 August 2008.
X. ZHANG, “Thermo- and Electromechanics of Multilayer Thin-Film Microstructures for MEMS Applications,” Mechanics of Materials & Devices and Structural Mechanics, AFOSR Annual Grantees’/Contrac-tors’ Meeting, Arlington, VA, USA, 18-20 August 2008.
W.J. Padilla, H. Chen, N. Landy, C.M. Binghama, H. Tao, X. ZHANG, J. Zided, A.C. Gossardd, A.J. Taylor, and R.D. Averitt, “Metamaterials for the terahertz gap,” the 33rd International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves, Pasadena, CA, 15-19 September 2008.
Y. Qiu, R. Liao, and X. ZHANG, “Impedance-Sensing Assay for Real-time Monitoring Ongoing Cardiomyocyte Apoptosis,” the 12th Inter-national Conference on Miniaturized Systems for Chemistry and Life Sciences, San Diego, CA, 12-16 October 2008.
Y. Qiu, R. Liao, and X. ZHANG, “A Cardiomyocyte-based Biosensor for the Study on Hypertrophy Induced by Tumor Necrosis Factor Alfa,” the 12th International Conference on Miniaturized Systems for Chemistry and Life Sciences, San Diego, CA, 12-16 October 2008.
I-K Lin, Y-M Liao, K-S Chen, and X. ZHANG, “Viscoelastic Character-ization of Soft Micropillars for Cellular Mechanics Study,” the 12th International Conference on Miniaturized Systems for Chemistry and Life Sciences, San Diego, CA, 12-16 October 2008.
X. Zheng and X. ZHANG, “A Novel Versatile Biomechano-sensor for Real Time Vascular Cell Contractility Mapping,” the 12th International Conference on Miniaturized Systems for Chemistry and Life Sciences, San Diego, CA, 12-16 October 2008.
X. Zheng and X. ZHANG, “Diffraction Moiré: Decoupling Distortions in Periodic Polymeric Post Arrays,” the 12th International Conference on Miniaturized Systems for Chemistry and Life Sciences, San Diego,
CA, 12-16 October 2008.
X. Zheng and X. ZHANG, “Mapping Smooth Muscle Cell Contractile State Regulated by Contractile Proteins using a Novel BioMEMS Moi-ré Mapping Sensor,” AVS 55th International Symposium & Exhibition, Boston, MA, USA, 19-24 October 2008.
Y. Qiu, R. Liao, and X. ZHANG, “Electrical Assay for Real-time Monitor-ing Cardiomyocyte Apoptosis,” AVS 55th International Symposium & Exhibition, Boston, MA, 19-24 October 2008.
H. Tao, K. Fan, C.M. Bingham, W.J. Padilla, R.D. Averitt, and X. ZHANG, “Design and Fabrication of Flexible Electrically Resonant Terahetz Metamaterials,” ASME International Mechanical Engineering Con-gress and Exposition, Boston, MA, 31 October – 6 November 2008.
X. Zheng and X. ZHANG, “Contrast Enhancement of Cell Traction Force Probing by Capping the Tips with Gold Particles,” ASME Interna-tional Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, Boston, MA, 31 October – 6 November 2008.
I-K Lin, Y-M Liao, Y. Liu, K-S Ou, K-S Chen, and X. ZHANG, “Elastic and Viscoelastic Characterization and Modeling of Polymer based Structures for Biogical Applications,” ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, Boston, MA, 31 October – 6 November 2008.
X. Zheng and X. ZHANG, “Mapping and Decoupling Distortions in Polymeric Periodic Substrates for Biological Applications,” ASME In-ternational Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, Boston, MA, 31 October – 6 November 2008.
Y. Qiu, R. Liao, and X. ZHANG, “A Cardiomyocyte-based Biosensor for the Study on Hypertrophy Induced by Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha,” ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposi-tion, Boston, MA, 31 October – 6 November 2008.
H. Tao, K. Fan, A.C. Strikwerda, W.J. Padilla, R.D. Averitt , and X. ZHANG, “Filling Terahertz Gap: Development of MEMS-based Active Metamaterial Structures and Devices at Terahertz Frequencies,” Mi-croelectromechanical Systems--Materials and Devices II, Materials Research Society Fall Meeting, Boston, MA, 1-5 December 2008.
X. Zheng, and X. ZHANG, “Interface Enhancement and Analysis of Mi-cro Biomechano Sensor using Gold Particles,” Mechanics of Biological and Biomedical Materials, Materials Research Society Fall Meeting, Boston, MA, 1-5 December 2008.
H. Tao, N.I. Landy, K. Fan, A.C. Strikwerda, W.J. Padilla, R.D. Averitt, and X. ZHANG, “Flexible Terahertz Metamaterials: Towards a Tera-hertz Metamaterial Invisible Cloak,” 2008 International Electron De-vices Meeting, San Francisco, CA, USA, 15-17 December 2008.
B.C. Kaanta, H.Chen, G. Lambertus, W.H. Steinecker, O. Zhdaneev, X. ZHANG, “High Sensitivity Micro-Thermal Conductivity Detector for Gas Chromatography,” the 22nd IEEE International Conference on Mi-cro Electro Mechanical Systems, Sorrento, Italy, 25-29 January 2009.
H. Tao, N.I. Landy, K. Fan, A.C. Strikwerda, W.J. Padilla, R.D. Averitt, and X. ZHANG, “Terahertz Metamaterials with Simultaneously Nega-tive Electric and Magnetic Resonance Responses based on Bimaterial Pop up Structures,” the 22nd IEEE International Conference on Micro Electro Mechanical Systems, Sorrento, Italy, 25-29 January 2009.
54 www.bu.edu/me/
H. Tao, C.M. Bingham, A.C. Strikwerda, D. Pilon, D. Shrekenhamer, N.I. Landy, K. Fan, W.J. Padilla, X. ZHANG, and R.D. Averitt, “Flexible Wide Angle Terahertz Resonant Absorber Based on Perfectly Impedance Matched Metamaterials,” the 29th Conference on Lasers and Electro Optics, Baltimore, MD, USA, 31 May - 5 June 2009.
A.C. Strikwerda, K. Fan, H. Tao, D. Pilon, X. ZHANG, and R.D. Averitt, “Comparison of Birefringent Metamaterials and Meanderline Struc-ture as Quarter-Wave Plates at Terahertz Frequencies,” the 29th Con-ference on Lasers and Electro Optics, Baltimore, MD, USA, 31 May - 5 June 2009.
H. Tao, A.C. Strikwerda, K. Fan, C.M. Bingham, W.J. Padilla, X. ZHANG, and R.D. Averitt, “Flexible Terahertz Metamaterials on Polyimide Sub-strates,” the 29th Conference on Lasers and Electro Optics, Baltimore, MD, USA, 31 May - 5 June 2009.
X. ZHANG, “Creating Micro/Nano Fabricated Structures for Cellular Mechanical Force Measurements in Living Cells,” NSF Design, Service and Manufacturing Grantees and Research Conference, Honolulu, HI, USA, 22-25 June 2009.
X. ZHANG, “A Digital Bio/Nanoelectronics Interface for Single Cell Study,” NSF Design, Service and Manufacturing Grantees and Re-search Conference, Honolulu, HI, USA, 22-25 June 2009.
X. ZHANG, “Mechanical Behavior of Amorphous Plasma-Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposited Silicon Oxide Films for MEMS Applica-tions,” NSF Design, Service and Manufacturing Grantees and Re-search Conference, Honolulu, HI, USA, 22-25 June 2009.
X. ZHANG, “Elastic and Viscoelastic Characterization and Modeling of Polymer based Structures for Biological Applications,” NSF Design, Service and Manufacturing Grantees and Research Conference, Ho-nolulu, HI, USA, 22-25 June 2009.
Y. Qiu, R. Liao, and X. ZHANG, “Preventing Cardiomyocytes from TNF-Alpha-Induced Cell Death based on Real-Time Monitoring Cell Adhe-sion through Impedance Sensors,” the 15th International Conference on Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems, Denver, CO, USA, 21-25 June 2009.
Y. Zou, and Y. ZHANG, “Experimental and Theoretical Study of Bovine Aorta and Its Elastin,” ASME Summer Bioengineering Conference, Marco Island, FL, 2008.
M.-J. Chow, Y. Zou, H. He, F. McGowan, D. McElhinney, D and Y. ZHANG, “Effect of Pulmonary Artery Banding on the Mechanical Be-havior of Arteries,” ASME International Mechanical Engineering Con-gress and Exposition, Boston, MA, 2008.
I.-K. Lin, K. Fan, S. Huang, A. Gonzalez, Y. ZHANG, and X. ZHANG, “Characterization of Gradient Residual Stress in Bimaterial Micro-cantilever Structures for MEMS Applications,” ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, Boston, MA, 2008.
D. Weiand and Y. ZHANG, “Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Fric-tion and the Effect of Surface Coating,” ASME International Mechani-cal Engineering Congress and Exposition, Boston, MA, 2008.
Y. Zou, and Y. ZHANG, “Experimental and Theoretical Study of Bovine Aorta and Its Elastin,” ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, Boston, MA, 2008.
P A T E N T S
S. GOPALAN, U.B. PAL, S.N. BASU and W. Huang, “Protective Oxide Coatings for SOFC Interconnec-tions”, United States Patent Applica-tion #20090035561.
B. Vattiat, D. WROBLEWSKI, and M. GEVELBER, “Plasma State and Flux Sensor,” serial no. 12008787, joint Boston University/Cyber Ma-terials application, January 2008.
S. GOPALAN and U.B. PAL, “Hydrogen Separation Using Oxygen-Ion-Electron Mixed Conducting Mem-branes,” US Patent No. 7,393,384, 1 July 2008.
D. Seccombe, G.A. Orbeck, Jr., S. GOPALAN, and U.B. PAL, “1. Pro-cess for Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Manu-facture,” US Patent No. 7,485,385, 3 February 2009.
R. Dean, R.G. HOLT and R.A. ROY, “System and method for creating liquid droplet impact forced collapse of laser nanoparticle nucleated cavities for controlled nuclear reactions,” US Patent No. US 7,445,319 B2, 4 November 2008.
A. SHARON, “Isolation of Messenger RNA from Mammalian Cells,” provisional filed December 2008.
A. SHARON, “Isolation of Total RNA from Mammalian Cells,” provi-sional filed December 2008.
A. SHARON, “Low Cost Disposable Medical Forceps to Enable,” provi-sional filed March 2009.
A. SHARON, “Hollow Central Channel for Various Functionalities,” provisional filed March 2009.
A. SHARON, “Reservoir-Buffered Mixers and Remote-Valve Switching
for Microfluidics,” provisional filed March 2009.
552008-2009 Annual Report
Research Laborator ies
Advanced Materials Process Control Lab
The primary re-search focus of the Advanced Materi-als Process Control Laboratory is to ap-ply a systems-based approach to improv-ing material pro-cessing capabilities.
Research projects involve an integrated effort of physical modeling, sensor development, system design, and control development.
Current projects include work on plasma deposition for protective coatings, crystal growth for electronic applications, and chemical vapor deposition. An experi-mental CVD system has been devel-oped for implementing real-time control. A microbalance is used to measure growth rates in situ, and parallel DSP boards are used for data analysis and control. Related research includes development of analysis methods for identifying fundamen-tal process constraints, as well as development of advanced sensors and observers to infer the process state.
Biomedical Microdevices and Microenvironments
The Biomedical Mi-crodevices and Mi-croenvironments laboratory is fo-cused on materials research activities in the broad areas of tissue engineer-ing and biomedical
device design. The laboratory is equipped for polymer and hydrogel synthesis, microfluidic device rapid prototyping, fabrica-tion of tissue engineering scaffold materials, molecular analysis, and tissue culture. It houses a dynamic mechanical analyzer for time and temperature sensitive testing of gel and polymer macroscale mechanical proper-ties.
This facility is a fully functional laboratory for integrated mechani-cal, chemical, and biological testing of biomaterials. The laboratory is adjacent to the shared bio-micro/nanofabrication center. This clean-room contains a mask aligner, AFM, DekTak Profilometer, e-beam evaporator, and a spin coater. The lab also maintains a Hysitron Tribo-scope Nanoindentation Instrument located in the Low Vibration Area of the Photonics Center. Laboratory projects include experi-ments and modeling of the contact problem for nanoscale probes on soft hydrated biomateri-als, cell-biomaterial interactions in tissue engi-neering materials, and diagnostic microfluidic device design.
Biomedical Ultrasonics Lab
This laboratory is equipped for wet and dry experiments sup-porting a broad spectrum of ultrasound research, including nonlinear acoustics, bubble-re-lated physical and biomedical acoustics, therapeutic ultra-sound, acoustic cavitation, and transduction. There are two
fully instrumented ultrasonic scan tanks with computer-controlled positioners. One is for research into high-intensity-focused ultra-sound for surgery and the other contains a peizo-electric array with 170 elements capable of generating intense shock waves for research in lithotripsy. The lab has a scanning acoustic microscope (SAM) that can employ ultrasound pulses with frequencies up to 150 MHz for im-aging samples. The lab is well stocked with general-purpose test and measurement equipment such as function generators, multimeters, power amplifiers, preamps, analog and digital oscilloscopes. The lab is equipped with a full-size fume hood, a water purification system, and various instruments for fluid and biomaterial control, processing, and measurement.
BioRobotics Lab
The BioRobotics Research Group (BRG) solves theoretical and practical problems in mini-mally invasive surgery. They specialize in medical robot and instrument design, develop-ment of imaging techniques for surgical guidance, model-ing tool-tissue interaction; and teleoperation / automation of instrument motion. They utilize analytical tools from robotics, dynamics and con-
trol together with innovative design techniques to create success-ful solutions. The team members come from diverse backgrounds with degrees in mechanical / biomedical / electrical engineering and medicine. Their specialties range from biomedical robotics, clinical practice and imaging to product design and many areas in between.
Control in Nanoscale Systems
Andersson’s research group uses this facility to develop and apply new techniques for the study of dynamics in nanoscale systems. We use advanced systems and control methods to design and analyze algorithms which offer extremely high spatial and temporal resolu-tion. Our target systems lie primarily in the realm of single molecules and molecular systems. The lab includes an optical microscope, a nanopositioning stage, a homebuilt confocal microscope, and laser excitation sources.
MICHAEL GEVELBER
CATHERINE KLAPPERICH
ROBIN CLEVELAND, R.GLYNN HOLT, TYRONE PORTER, RON ROY
PIERRE DUPONT
SEAN ANDERSSON
56 www.bu.edu/me/
Fabrication Lab
The Fabrication Laborato-ry helps support the over-all research mission of the department by fabricating instrumentation and com-ponents for research use. Currently, the major ma-chinery in the laboratory consists of 3 Sharp end mills with CNC control sys-tems, two Sharp lathes, a
band saw, some older drill presses, a table saw, a grinder and sander, and miscellaneous hand tools. The laboratory occupies 1305 sq. ft. in two adjacent rooms: ENG B02 and ENG B07 of 110 Cummington St. Its operation is under the supervision of the department’s laboratory supervisor and laboratory engineer.
Green Manufacturing Lab
Research in Green Manufacturing Laboratory focuses on environ-mentally benign power generation technologies such as solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs). They explore the material science and electro-chemistry of SOFCs using tools such as impedance spectroscopy, gal-vanostats and potentiostats. Studies in this lab include measurement of the rates of charge transfer reactions that occur at the interfaces of solid state electrochemical devices, exploration of new materials and processes and modeling of the transport phenomena that occur in such devices. In this lab, they also conduct research on ceramic gas separation membranes for the separation of industrially important gases such as oxygen and hydrogen.
Ongoing projects conducted in close collaboration with industrial partners include the development of electrode and electrolyte ma-terials for lower operating temperature SOFCs and the development of mixed ionic and electronic conducting materials for separation of hydrogen. The laboratory is equipped with a Perkin Elmer 263 A Potentiostat/Galvanostat used for characterization of electrochemi-cal systems such as fuel cells, ceramic gas separation membranes, batteries and sensors, a Horiba 910 particle size analyzer capable of obtaining particle size distributions of powders in the range of 0.01 microns to 1 mm using light scattering technique, a Solartron 1255 Frequency Response Analyzer (FRA) used for AC impedance spectros-copy, high temperature furnaces that can operate up to 1700˚C, and a Spex 8000 mill capable of producing sub-micron particles for use in solid state electrodes by high-energy ball milling in a very short period of time.
High Temperature Materials Processing Lab
High Temperature Materials Processing Laboratory is completely equipped for studying most high-temperature chemical and elec-trochemical processes involving metals and ceramics. It includes several high-temperature furnaces, residual gas analyzers, CO/CO2 analyzers, potentiostats, impedance analyzers, state-of-the-art ther-mogravimetric Cahn Balance, high precision power supplies capable of operating under constant current/voltage mode, viscometers, state-of-the-art data acquisition systems, powder processing facility, and fuel cell test stations.
The laboratory currently supports the following research programs: green electrochemical synthesis of high-energy content metals such
as magnesium, titanium, calcium, and tantalum, novel materials pro-cessing for hydrogen storage, membrane technology for hydrogen production and separation, hybrid one-step processing of solid oxide fuel cells, and materials for intermediate temperature solid oxide fuel cells.
High Temperature Oxidation Lab
The research focus is to investigate high-temperature oxidation be-havior of materials by exposing metal and ceramic samples to cor-rosive atmospheres containing oxygen and sulfur at elevated tem-peratures up to 1,600˚C. The laboratory is equipped with a CAHN (thermogravi-metric) balance and a Mettler microbalance for weight gain measurements, as well as an apparatus for oxidation in O–18 atmospheres, in order to determine oxidation mechanisms.
Hybrid and Networked Systems (HyNeSs) Lab
Belta’s research group is interested in phenomena that occur when continuous dynamics, described by systems of differential equations, are combined with discrete dynamics, modelled as automata or state transition graphs. Such systems are called hybrid, and examples range from man-made systems such as mobile robots, to naturally occurring systems such as biochemical networks, where the continu-ous dynamics of metabolic processes is regulated by the logic of gene expression. Its approach to the analysis and control of such systems combine concepts and tools from computer science and control theory. Its current application areas are networked mobile robotics, swarming, gene networks, and genome scale metabolic analysis.
Intelligent Mechatronics
The mission of the Labora-tory for Intelligent Mecha-tronic Systems (LIMS), for-merly called the BU Robotics Lab, is to understand the de-sign and integration of novel sensing and actuation tech-nologies for a wide variety of control applications. The Lab is particularly interested in active materials exploiting electrostrictive and magne-tostrictive effects, as well as the rapidly growing variety of silicon-based microelectro-mechanical (MEMs) devices. Incorporating these into ac-tuator and sensor arrays, the
Lab studies mechatronic systems in which global dynamical effects are achieved through the aggregation of distributed parallel local ac-tions. Control of pattern formation in multiagent systems in which band limited communication channels mediate real-time data-flow between sensor and actuator arrays is central to the research. Appli-cations of interest include fluid structure interactions, robotic system interactions with fluids and elastic solids, microelectromechanisms, rotating shafts, and turbine dynamics.
JOE ESTANO
SRIKANTH GOPALAN
UDAY PAL
SOUMENDRA BASU
CALIN BELTA
JOHN BAILLIEUL
572008-2009 Annual Report
Laser Acoustics Lab
The laser acoustics lab supports research in the nondestructive characterization of conventional and biological materials. Current research projects include the development of acousto-optic imaging systems for the detec-tion of abnormalities deep with-in biological tissues, the study of light and sound interaction with nanoparticles with potential ap-plications in tissue imaging and therapy, and the development of full-field techniques for the
characterization of arrays of nanostructures. The lab houses a variety of ultrasonic imaging and optical equipment.
Lab for Microsystems Technology
Laboratory for Microsystems Technology (LMST) is dedicated to interdisciplinary research in the design, fabrication, characteriza-tion, packaging, and operation of Microelectromechanical Systems (MEMS) and Nanoelectromechanical Systems (NEMS). They perform research on MEMS and NEMS. Specifically, they are interested in ap-plying materials science, micro/nanomechanics, and micro/nano-manufacturing technologies to solve various engineering problems that are motivated by practical applications in MEMS/NEMS and emerging nanobiotechnologies. LMST is a Class 1000 cleanroom that provides resources for the design, fabrication, characterization, and testing of MEMS/NEMS devices. LMST is also a general biochemistry laboratory that has a strong collaboration with the Boston University School of Medicine.
Materials Theory
Materials Theory Group seeks to understand the property of materials via modeling and simulation. The Group makes functional materials devices following theoretical predic-tions in the Materials Theory Laboratory.
Medical Acoustics Lab
The Medical Acoustics Laboratory aims at studying the interaction between ultrasound, tissue, and biomaterials and developing new ul-trasound technologies for medical applications. Research thrusts in the Medical Acoustics Lab include the development of temperature- and pressure-sensitive drug carriers, the formulation and character-ization of monodisperse ultrasound contrast agents, and designing systems to monitor and control bubble-enhanced ultrasound thermal ablation of solid tumors.
Microscopy Lab
Microscopy Laboratory is dedicated to the preparation of electron transparent specimens for observation in the Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM). The specimens have to be reduced to a thick-ness on the order of 100Å in order to study atomic arrangements by high resolution TEM. Equipment available for this purpose, includes a GATAN dimpler and ion-mill, as well as precision grinding and pol-ishing apparatus. The laboratory is also equipped with a darkroom, capable of processing TEM negatives and prints.
Multiscale Tissue Biomechanics Lab
In the Multiscale Tissue Biomechanics Lab, K. Zhang’s research group integrates the knowledge in biology, nonlinear solid mechanics, and finite element modeling, especially of complex materials and consti-tutive behavior. Through the research, the lab provides insights on understanding the relationship between microscopic biological pro-cesses and changes in macroscopic tissue mechanics due to diseases, and helps the development of diagnostic, therapeutic, and pharma-ceutical techniques. The Multi-Scale Tissue Biome-chanics Laboratory was established in 2006 and includes a fully equipped wet lab and computation-al facilities for character-ization and modeling of the mechanical behavior of soft biological tissues and composites at multi-scale.
Nanoscale Engineering Lab
The Nanoscale Engineering Laboratory is used to fabricate nanome-ter scale semiconductor mechanical devices using electron beam lithography, plasma, and wet etching techniques. After fabrication, various state-of-the-art characterization techniques are employed to study the physical processes dominant in these nanomechanical de-vices. Among the fundamental phenomena studied are dissipation, fluctuations, and surface effects at the nanometer length scales. The practical aspects of this research involve the design and fabrication of ultra-high-speed nanomechanical sensors and development of surface nano-engineering techniques for improved device character-istics.
Orthopaedic and Developmental Biomechanics Lab
Morgan’s research group uses experimental and computational methods to explore the relationships between structure and me-chanical function of biological tissues at multiple length scales in the Orthopaedic and Developmental Biomechanics Lab. Current research projects include quantification of physiological loading conditions, 3-D visualization and prediction of spine fractures, and the effects of mechanical stimulation on joint and articular cartilage development.
The laboratory houses a biaxial (axial-torsional) servohydraulic mate-rials testing system with a variety of extensometers and load cells, a miniature torsional testing system, two micro-computed tomography systems, a multi-channel signal conditional and amplification system,
TODD MURRAY, RON ROY
XIN ZHANG
XI LIN
TYRONE PORTER
SOUMENDRA BASU
KATHERINE ZHANG
KAMIL EKINCI
ELISE MORGAN
58 www.bu.edu/me/
an X-ray cabinet, and various cutting tools including a sledge micro-tome and low-speed wafering saw. Additional space is dedicated to cell and tissue culture. Computational facilities include PC worksta-tions equipped with software for image processing, finite element analysis, and general computing.
Photo-acoustics and Photo-thermal Microscopy Lab
Research in the Photo-acoustics and Photo-thermal Microscopy lab focuses on the development of laser-based techniques for the char-acterization and nondestructive evaluation of small scale structures including thin films and coatings, membranes, MEMS and nanoscale devices. The laboratory includes pulsed and high, frequency ampli-tude modulated laser sources, optical interferometers, and a variety of high speed electronic and signal processing components.
Physical Acoustics Lab
The interaction of sound with with fluids, especially those with free surfaces, is at the heart of the work in the Physical Acoustics Lab. The coupling of sound to interfacial motion leads to a variety of interesting phe-nomena involving free sur-faces, bubbles and drops. Many of these phenomena
have surprising practical applications. A few of our projects are de-scribed below.
In one externally funded project, we are investigating the collective collapse of cavitation clusters in high-static-pressure liquids. We uti-lize high-power pulsed laser beam arrays to control cluster nucleation and investigate the onset of collective bubble effects in high-pressure spherical resonators. Understanding the physics of collective clus-ter collapse will lead to applications involving high-temperature and high-pressure reactions.
In another project, in collaboration with a biomedical device com-pany, we are using ultrasonic acoustic levitation as a technique for investigating the rheology of blood clots. The uniqueness of this non-contact method allows the determination of the intrinsic strength of clots as a function of a variety of control factors, in turn allowing medical device designers to more effectively break up clots. In two other projects we are investigating the unique properties of acousti-cally-driven nonlinear parametric instability waves known as Faraday waves. These waves spontaneously form patterns, and efficiently focus vibrational energy at a free surface. Our efforts are directed at investigating pattern freezing as an alternative to traditional time-consuming approaches, and towards understanding Faraday waves in periodic structures.
Powder Metallurgy & X-ray Lab
The powder processing laboratory is equipped to batch, process, and densify a wide variety of materials. Particle size reduction and uni-form mixing are essential in any powder preparation. In addition to a 500cc capacity attritor mill for processing small powder batches, an extensive selection of ball mill sizes and a variety of milling media,
including silicon nitride and titanium carbide, are available. Dies and presses for powder compaction and component development have been established. Consolidation and sintering capabilities include vacuum, over pressure, and hot pressing up to 25,000 KgF and tem-peratures in excess of 2,400˚C. These capabilities make the powder processing laboratory uniquely equipped for developing high tem-perature monolithic and composite materials.
The laboratory is also equipped with a Bruker D8 Focus diffractome-ter with independent theta and two theta axis with copper radiation. This unit extends the laboratory’s capability to perform single crystal back reflection Laue studies for crystal orientation. The standard de-tector is the scintillation counter, with high dynamic range and low internal background. In addition, several Debye Scherrer powder cameras are also available. This unit is equipped with all necessary components for qualitative or quantitative phase analysis, crystallite size determination, and structure determination and refinement.
Precision Engineering
The Precision Engineering Research Laboratory is home to an active program in Micro-electromechanical Systems (MEMS) research. In MEMS, the tools that emerged from the semiconductor manufactur-ing revolution are employed to design and build electronic, mechani-cal, and optical devices whose dimensions are measured in nano-meters and micrometers. Like their microelectronic counterparts, MEMS devices can be made extremely small and in great numbers economically. The research program at PERL focuses on Optical MEMS systems—electromechanical devices to improve the perfor-mance of imaging and communication systems. One of the more suc-cessful outcomes of this research has been the design, fabrication, and testing of a new class of micromirror array that can be used to improve the resolution of microscopes, telescopes, and biomedical instruments.
Two specific types of these devices, developed at the University—MEMS deformable mirrors and MEMS spatial light modulators—have been incorporated into test-beds worldwide to exploit this new tech-nology. The work on optical MEMS includes design, manufacturing, and testing of these devices. PERL is housed in the Photonics Center, where world-class facilities for modeling, producing, and measuring optical MEMS devices are available.
Shock Wave Lab
The Shock Wave Laboratory houses a number of shock wave sources for research into lithotripsy (breaking of kidney stones) and shock wave therapy (the treatment of musculoskeletal pain). There are two electrohydraulic (spark based source) lithotripters: one is a research device which allows control over various aspects of the shock wave and the second is a clinical device complete with fluoroscopic imag-ing. The lab is also home to two shock wave therapy (SWT) devices for research into the use of shock waves to treat soft-tissue injury. Acoustical and optical cavitation detection systems are used to sense bubble activity generated by shock waves. There is a high-pressure chamber with acoustically transparent windows that is equipped with acoustic and optical ports to allow for the study of shock wave interaction with stones under pressure.
The laboratory also houses the Drop Physics Module, an acoustic levitation apparatus that flew on the Space Shuttle in the Space-lab module during the missions STS-50 (First United States Micro-gravity Laboratory, USML-1) and STS-73 (USML-2). The apparatus enabled
TODD MURRAY
R.GLYNN HOLT
VINOD SARIN
TOM BIFANO
ROBIN CLEVELAND
592008-2009 Annual Report
the study of drop dynamics and surface rheology in micro-gravity. This apparatus is currently being refurbished and will be used for studies of the dynamic rheology of foams.
Undergraduate Machining Lab
This lab is used to prototype manufacturing projects, and provides fundamental engineering research support. The lab emphasizes modern processing machinery and manufacturing aids such as com-puter-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing (CAD/CAM).
This lab is used for demonstration and projects in several manufac-turing courses for carrying out milling, cutting, and drilling of differ-ent materials. This state-of-the-art shop is equipped with a HAAS VF2 Vertical Machining Center, 2 Sharp 1224 Vertical Machining Centers, an OKUMA LB 15 CNC 12 Station Turret Lathe, a FANUC TAPE CUT W0 Wire EDM, a HARDINGE HLV-H Toolroom Lathe, a Sharp SG618 Surface Grinder, 2 BRIDGEPORT vertical mills, a LEBLOND 16” engine lathe, 3 BRIDGEPORT Series I-CNC vertical mills w/Anilam Controls, a GROB vertical band saw, a CLAUSING-COLCHESTER 15” engine lathe, a KEARNEY TRECKER horizontal mill, and a RUEMELIN sand blaster. The lab also has 2 computer stations using Virtual Gibbs Cad Cam, Delcam’s ArtCam, and Solid Works software.
Underwater Sound and Ultrasound Lab
The focus of this laboratory is the propagation of sound in natural bodies of water. Facilities include a wet lab testing facility as well as various instrumentation for sound generation, detection, and propa-gation experiments. The lab also contains 2 workstations for com-putational modeling. In addition to lab and computational efforts, at-sea research projects are under way through collaborations with other regional facilities.
Facilities include a large-water-filled, ultrasound scan tank (with preci-sion positioners, supporting com-puters and acous-tic-electronic in-strumentation) for general-purpose ultrasound re-search and two diagnostic ultra-sound scanners for biomedical imag-ing research. The SNS work features
an acoustic resonator designed for detecting free gas bubbles in flow-ing mercury and a laser cavitation system for generating reproducible bubble cloud collapse near boundaries under well-controlled aque-ous conditions. Cloud collapse diagnostics include high-speed pho-tography, acoustic emission measurements, and boundary surface vibrations measured using a laser Doppler vibrometer.
Vibrations Lab
The laboratory offers a full suite of sensors, instrumentation, and software necessary to research the vibrations of complex structures and technologies that reduce vibration and noise. One area of cur-rent interest is the spatial mapping of energy removal by damping treatments in order to better design damping treatments for com-plex structures. Another area is the mitigation of automotive brake squeal.
BOB SJOSTROM
WILLIAM CAREY, ROBIN CLEVELAND, R.GLYNN HOLT, RAYMOND NA-GEM, RON ROY
J.GREGORY McDANIEL
Orthopaedic and Developmental Biomechanics Lab
60 www.bu.edu/me/
Aff i l iated Research Centers
Center for BioDynamics (CBD)
The Center for Biodynam-ics (CBD) is a multidisci-plinary, interdepartmental center, which strives to advance training and re-search between dynamical
systems, biology, and engineering. The CBD trains undergraduates, graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows in leading techniques from these disciplines. The CBD emphasizes the integration of re-search and education, as well as the vertical integration of students and mentors at all levels within Boston University. Training is often done through involvement in cross-disciplinary collaborations and co-mentored projects.
Fraunhofer Center for Manufacturing Innovation
The Fraunhofer USA Cen-ter for Manufacturing In-novation (FHCMI) provides product development as-sistance and manufactur-
ing solutions to local and international industry. We work with our clients to develop new technologies, improve current manufacturing operations and, based on our global view, benchmark against the world’s best practices. Our unique ability to access a global research base and our own vast experience give our clients an unparalleled advantage.
Fraunhofer has been bridging the gap between academic research and industrial needs for more than 50 years. It is Europe’s largest R&D organization spanning over fifty locations across Europe, Asia and North America; and includes an annual client base of more than three thousand corporations.
The model is very simple: Fraunhofer Institutes work with industry and universities to scale up cutting edge research into real working technologies on an industrial time table. Our engineering leads to the development of advanced machinery and processes for a variety of applications. These range from submicron precision assembly for the photonics, biotech and semiconductor industries, to high volume manufacture of consumer products.
Photonics Center To help industry bridge the gap between basic research and practical application, Boston University launched the Photonics Center in 1994
with $29 million in seed funding from the federal government. The center is now forging true business partnerships in which companies draw on the University’s exceptional expertise and resources in engi-neering, science, medicine, and management to build actual product prototypes and spawn a growing stream of new companies.
The Photonics Center is a bold new model for university-industry col-laboration. It has been established to work directly with investors and
industrial partners to turn emerging concepts in photonics technol-ogy into commercial products. The Center is staffed and equipped to help industry partners reduce the technical and financial risk involved in developing new ideas, refining them in laboratory, building work-ing prototypes, and starting up companies. To date the Center has forged joint ventures with a dozen companies to develop new prod-ucts in data storage, environmental monitoring, optoelectronics, and biotechnology.
Center for Subsurface Sensing and Imaging Systems (CenSSIS)
The Bernard M. Gordon Center for Subsurface Sensing and Imag-ing Systems is a multi-university National Science Foundation En-gineering Research Center (NSF-ERC) founded in 2000. Its mission is to develop new technologies to detect hidden objects—and to use those technologies to meet realworld subsurface challenges
in areas as diverse as noninvasive breast cancer detection and un-derground pollution assessment. The center’s multidisciplinary ap-proach combines expertise in wave physics (photonics, ultrasonics, electromagnetics), multisensor fusion, image processing, and 3D CAT-scan-like reconstruction and visualization. The Gordon Center operates with the speed and agility more typical of a results-driven private company than of an academic institution, consistent with the needs of its industrial and government partners. With its commit-ment to leveraging technology transfer to spur economic develop-ment, the Gordon Center is intended to be a national model for the fusion of academic research and private-sector collaboration.
Center for Information and Systems Engineering (CISE)
The Center for Infor-mation and Systems Engineering pro-vides a home across
departments for faculty and students interested in information and systems engineering methodologies and their relevance to applica-tion domains encompassing the analysis, design, and management of complex systems. Information and systems engineering research at Boston University is strong and accomplished but also spread across departments, colleges and schools within the University. In 2002, the Trustees approved the new CISE in order to foster greater interactions among researchers speaking the same technical language across di-verse application domains. Currently, there are 30 affiliated faculty from the departments of Biomedical Engineering, Computer Science, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Mathematics and Statistics, Mechanical Engineering, Operations Management and the Division of Systems Engineering. Current focal application domains include: Automation, robotics and control; Communications and networking; Computational Biology; Information Sciences; Production, Service Systems, and Supply Chains.
612008-2009 Annual Report
Center for Nanoscience and Nanobiotechnology
Nanoscience and nanotechnology re-search and develop-ment are leading a
revolution in basic materials science and engineering. New advance-ments with designed functionality are poised to enable a huge range of applications in everything from developing fundamental building block in the electronics, photonics, and materials sectors, to sensors, biomimetic and biocompatible platforms throughout the biomedical and health sector.
The strength of Boston University’s efforts in interdisciplinary nano-science and nanotechnology form an axis that begins in basic ma-terials science, surface science, physics, chemistry, and engineering, extending into molecular and cellular biology, biophysics, and the technologies of microfluidics, MEMS, and onto manufacturing. Our strengths are in developing and using nanotechnology advances in materials and platforms with our capabilities in biomedical engineer-
ing to focus on applications in understanding subcellular processes, biomolecular function and human physiology.
The new Center for Nanoscience and Nanobiotechnology is estab-lished to advance academic and technological research and develop-ment in nanoscience and nanobiotechnology. The Center serves as a hub for nanoscience researchers from the Charles River and Medical Campuses and build activities that develop interdisciplinary research and training. The Center will connect scientists from disparate disci-plines with each other in seminars, meetings, joint visitor programs and seeded projects to enhance the development of interdisciplinary nanoscale research. The Center will lead large, interdisciplinary pro-posal development and run funded programs for both research and training, as well as support individual researchers in their efforts by linking them with resources throughout the University and beyond. The Center will also build linkages between the research and tech-nological commercialization resources at BU including the Photonics Center, the Technology Commercialization Institute, and Fraunhofer and with external partners and industrial affiliates.
Photonics Center at Boston University
62 www.bu.edu/me/
Seminars
DATE SPEAKER TITLE
9.5.08 Elise MorganDepartment of Mechanical EngineeringBoston University
Form, Function, Failure and Fate: Mechanics and Biology of Skeletal Tissues
9.19.08 Anup Shirgaonkar Mechanical Engineering M.I.T
Fluid Dynamics of Gymnotiform Propulsion in Aquatic Animals
10.3.08 John Saylor Department of Mechanical Engineering Clemson University
Transport and Statistics at the Air/Water Interface
10.10.08 Jeff Moore Department of Physiology & Biophysics Boston University
The Myosin Lever Arm and Cardiomyopathy
10.16.08 Mohammed Afsar Cambridge University
Computational Acoustics Past, Present and Future
10.17.08 Newell R. Washburn Departments of Chemistry and Biomedical EngineeringCarnegie Mellon University
Design Principles for Cytokine-Regulating Biomaterials
10.24.08 Stefan ZauscherDepartment of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Sciences Center for Biologically Inspired Materials and Materials Systems Duke University
Fabrication and Characterization of Patterned, Stimulus-Responsive Polymer Brushes: From Particle Capture to Glucose Sensing
10.31.08 Kevin Williams Department of Ocean Acoustics Applied Physics Laboratory University of Washington
Sand Sediment Acoustics and Incorporation of Sand Interfaces into Target Scattering
11.7.08 Gianni Campion Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering McGill University, Canada
Synthesizing Haptic Textures – Geometry, Control and Psychophysics
11.24.08 Chris Rogers Department of Mechanical Engineering, Center for Engineering Education Outreach Tufts University
Using Robotics to Teach Engineering to Second Graders and Controls to College Students
12.5.08 Seung-Wuk Lee Department of Bioengineering University of California, Berkeley
Making Viruses Work For Us
12.12.08 Anne Staples Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics Virginia Tech
Turbulence and Human Physiology: Two Challenging Multiscale Problems
1.9.09 Sergey A. Karabasov Engineering DepartmentCambridge University, UK
CABARET in the ocean gyres: a novel high-resolution computational method for fluid mechanics
632008-2009 Annual Report
DATE SPEAKER TITLE
1.16.09 Jonathan Malen Department of Mechanical Engineering University of California, Berkeley
Energy Transport and Conversion in Organic-Inorganic Hybrid Materials
1.23.09 Leopold Grinberg Division of Applied MathematicsBrown University
Large-Scale Simulation of the Human Arterial Tree
2.6.09 Matthias F. Schneider Biological Physics GroupUniversity of Augsburg, Germany
The Microfluidics of Blood Clotting and Thermodynamics of Thin Shells
2.10.09 Harold Park Department of Mechanical EngineeringUniversity of Colorado, Boulder
Surface Effects on the Mechanical Behavior and Proper-ties of Nanomaterials
2.13.09 Kristen L. Billiar Biomedical Engineering Tissue Mechanics and Mechanobiology Laboratory Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Mechanical modulation of cell function and tissue re-modeling
2.20.09 Aaron SchmidtM.I.T.
Optical Techniques for Exploring Nanoscale Transport
2.27.09 Jie Song Orthopedics and Cell Biology University of Massachusetts Medical School
Nanostructured Synthetic Bone Substitutes
3.6.09 Allison OkamuraDepartment of Mechanical EngineeringJohns Hopkins University
Haptics in Medical Robotics: Surgery, Simulation, and Rehabilitation
3.20.09 Margaret BaileyDepartment of Mechanical Engineering Rochester Institute of Technology
Quantifying Energy Usage within Complex, Energy Inten-sive Systems in order to Optimize Performance
3.27.09 Wilkins Aquino School of Civil and Environmental EngineeringCornell University
Proper Orthogonal Decomposition (POD) and Basis En-richment in the Generalized Finite Element Method
4.3.09 John P. McHugh Department of Mechanical Engineering University of New Hampshire
Internal Waves Behaving Badly
4.17.09 Stephen WigginsDepartment of MathematicsUniversity of Bristol, UK
Design Principles for Mixers Motivated by Ergodic Theory
5.1.09 Ali Khademhosseini MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital Harvard Medical School
Microengineered Hydrogels for Stem Cell Bioengineering and Tissue Regeneration
64 www.bu.edu/me/
Merri l L . Ebner Fund
B A C K G R O U N D
Since 2003, The Merrill L. Ebner Fund has been used to support a number of activities, all centered around the key aim to encour-age educational activities in engineering involving creative design and commercialization. Roger and Sandra Dorf of Austin, Texas, es-tablished the financial basis of this initial fund, to which others have continued to contribute. Prof. Merrill Ebner designed the main activi-ties and uses of the Fund, which will be discussed below. Since the Spring of 2008, when Prof. Ebner passed away, the Merrill Ebner Fund Committee has continued to organize and direct this work.
The committee for the present academic year included:
STORMY ATTAWAY Co-Chair
DAN COLE Co-Chair
RONALD A. ROY
J. GREGORY MCDANIEL
DONALD WROBLEWSKI
XIN ZHANG
SCOTT MUIRHEAD
DEBBIE DUNKLEE
During the academic year 2008-2009 the Ebner Fund was moved from the Department of Manufacturing Engineering to the new com-bined Department of Mechanical Engineering. Within the Fund are two distinct sub-funds. The “Endowed Fund” receives contributions from which the accumulated inter-est is available for use. Contribu-tions to the “Current Use Fund” are available for use immediately upon receipt. The Merrill Ebner Fund Committee provides oversight for both Funds.
Activities of the Fund, which impact both the undergraduate and graduate programs, are in some cases fully financed by the Fund. In other cases the Fund leverages its alumni and corporate contribu-tions by providing start-up funds for a project. The Fund continues to be primarily used to encourage creative design and commercializa-tion within Mechanical Engineering, with emphasis on manufactur-ing opera-tions.
F U N D S T A T U S
The Endowed Fund has received $1959 and the Current Use Fund has received $1,738 this fiscal year. As of July 1, 2009, total cumula-tive cash contributions to the Endowed Fund have been $127,658. As of that date the available funds in the Endowed Fund (interest on the principal) are $9704 and in the Current Use Fund are $11,539. Contributions from friends, alumni, staff, faculty and corporations in-terested in the Department and its design activity continue to arrive with ongoing outreach by faculty, staff, and the College’s Develop-ment Office.
D E S I G N P O R T F O L I O C O N T E S T
One of the first major activities at the undergraduate level of the Endowed Fund was the establish-ment of an annual Undergraduate Design Portfolio Contest. This design competition is open to all soph-omores and juniors in the College of Engineering. The intention is to encourage all engi-neering students to begin to develop their design portfolios early in their college career. The contest was started in the spring of 2005, and has been held annually since then. Judging pro-cedures were estab-lished in 2005 and revised in the past year to state that every year a Portfolio Review Jury is to be designated con-sisting minimally of the Chair (or Co-chair) of the Ebner Fund Com-mittee, a member of the design faculty, a senior engineering student, an engineering alumna or alumnus and the Mechanical Engineering Department Chairman or his or her designee. This year the jury con-sisted of:
STORMY ATTAWAY Co-Chair of the Ebner Fund Committee
DAN COLE Design Faculty
PAT CRAWFORD Senior Engineering Studen (last year’s winner)
GUY THOMPSON Engineering Alumnus
MORT ISAACSON Chair Designee
In order to encourage student participation in the contest, a Portfolio Workshop has also been held every year. At this workshop students and alumni exhibit their portfolios; the intention is to provide lower division engineering students with an idea of what reasonably com-plete portfolios look like. This year the workshop was held in con-junction with the Department Open House in December.
The jury decides on the three contest winners. Cash awards of $1000 for first prize, $500 for second prize, and $250 for third prize are awarded at the Department’s end-of-year social. This year’s winners were:
First: JOSEPH SHIFRIN
Second: ANDREW LEGENDRE
Third: SAMUEL MINKOFF
Some progress is being made in getting undergraduates to begin their design portfolios early, but there is still substantial room for further growth in the number and quality of portfolios submitted. It is the intention next year to highlight the portfolio contest during freshman courses and seminars.
652008-2009 Annual Report
The second annual “Graduate Thesis with the Greatest Commercial Potential,” award competition was held this year. Any M.S. or Ph.D. thesis produced by a student in the Department of Mechanical Engi-neering was eligible to be considered for this award. The total award for winning this juried competition is $3,000, paid from the Ebner Endowed Fund. The award is split evenly between the author(s) of the winning thesis and the faculty advisor for the thesis, to be used in support of the faculty advisor’s laboratory.
The nomination process that was established was that each thesis to be considered by the jury would be nominated by the Faculty Advi-sor for that thesis. In this process, the faculty advisor writes a single- page letter of nomination for the thesis, indicating what the com-mercial potential of the thesis is judged to be, and submit that letter, together with a returnable copy of the thesis, to the jury or its sur-rogate. Every year, the Chairman of the Mechanical Engineering De-partment would convene a jury of at least four appropriate individu-als. Typically, the jury would consist of a faculty member, a member of the industrial advisory committee, an alumna or alumnus, and one person selected by the Chair. The jury may, in its evaluation, decide not to make an award in a given year if no appropriate nomination has been made. This award would be announced at an appropriate end-of-the-semester social occasion.
The Jury for the 2009 Award consisted of three faculty members and two from industry:
ROBERT LUND, ME (Chair)
TED DE WINTER, ME
ANDRE SHARON, ME
PAUL KARGER, Twin Focus Capital Partners LLC (MFG alumnus)MIKE MULHERN, Tri Pyramid (ME alumnus)
The winning thesis, which was nominated by Prof. Xin Zhang, was written by Benjamin Hansen. The M.S. thesis was entitled “The Growth and Characterization of Copper (II) Oxide Nanowires with Single Nanowire Electrical, Gas Sensing, and Photoconduction Mea-surements.”
D E S I G N F E L L O W S H I P
Also at the graduate level, a company-designated, “Design Fellow-ship,” has been established through the Current Use Fund. The struc-ture of this Design Fellowship has been set up as a 16-month experi-ence leading to a Master’s degree. Design intensity is provided in the program by four elements: (1) graduate course work with special emphasis on the M.S. program option in Sensors and Instruments, (2) paid design assignments for 20-30 hours per week at the sponsoring company, (3) participation with a faculty design mentor providing an opportunity for the student to enhance the design and computation component in a senior or graduate course (referred to here as a “de-sign practicum”), and (4) an M.S. thesis with a design thrust.
Tuition costs are shared between the College of Engineering and the sponsoring company and a book stipend is provided. All fellowship payments to Boston University on behalf of the sponsoring compa-ny are paid through the fund as the sponsor of the fellowship pro-gram. Since 2005, The Raytheon Company has been the primary sup-porter of Design Fellows.
Two Raytheon Fellows finished their M.S. degree and graduated in May 2009. They are: Mariusz Jachtorowicz and David Tolmie. Mari-usz chose to do his research activity with Prof. Uday Pal on physical processes related to fuel cells. Much of the work involved experi-mental tests and analysis of the results. David chose to work with Prof. Dan Cole on simulation of physical processes involving investi-gating and controlling subharmonic resonances for Rydberg atomic systems.
In the Fall of 2008, two new Raytheon Fellows began their M.S. stud-ies in Mechanical Engineering. They are: Michelle Boudreau and Jo-seph Wasniewski. Besides the normal set of courses they need to take, they have also chosen their MS research areas, which are the following. Michelle has begun work with Prof. Theodore Fritz in the CAS Astronomy department on aerospace applications, specifically on the BU satellite project. Joseph has begun work with Professor Calin Belta on control and communication of autonomous robot net-works.
Thus, the Merrill L. Ebner Fund continues to increase the design and commercialization emphasis in activities of interest to mechanical and manufacturing engineering. It is expected that its influence will continue to evolve and grow in future years under the new merged
department of Mechanical Engineering.
G R A D U A T E T H E S I S A W A R D W I T H T H E G R E A T E S T C O M M E R C I A L P O T E N T I A L
The winners of the Design Portfolio Contest: Samuel Minkoff (l.), Andrew LeGendre (m.), and Joseph Shifrin (r.)
66 www.bu.edu/me/
672008-2009 Annual Report
68 www.bu.edu/me/
Department of Mechanical Engineering110 Cummington StreetBoston, MA 02215
www.bu.edu/me
top related